Rams DL & LBs … Verse, the new ILBs, & more

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Rams Huddle Rams DL & LBs … Verse, the new ILBs, & more

  • This topic has 50 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 6 months ago by Avatar photozn.
Viewing 30 posts - 1 through 30 (of 51 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #154032
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from Albert Breer: https://www.si.com/nfl/vikings-sam-darnold-franchise-tag-makes-sense-albert-breer-mailbag

    Who ended up being the biggest steal of the 2024 NFL draft?

    In the first round, I’m going to go with Los Angeles Rams DE Jared Verse, who was selected with the 19th pick and has emerged as the favorite for Defensive Rookie of the Year. The Rams looked at the idea of trading up for Georgia TE Brock Bowers, and Texas DT Byron Murphy II was high on their list, too—showing that Los Angeles has a pretty good idea of what it’s doing. In the end, sticking at 19 was the right move.

    I’ve heard Verse compared physically to Terrell Suggs, which is pretty good for any 24-year-old defensive player. Tough, heavy-handed and disruptive, Verse’s 4.5 sacks don’t begin to explain how big of an impact he’s made for the Rams.

    #154248
    Avatar photonittany ram
    Moderator

    Verse only had 9 sacks in both his junior and senior years at FSU. He’s incredibly disruptive, but maybe he just isn’t a sack guy.

    #154250
    TSRF
    Participant

    Verse Visa?

    #154601
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #154772
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    ‪Jourdan Rodrigue‬ ‪@jourdanrodrigue.bsky.social
    Jared Verse’s 77 pressures ranked No. 4 among all defensive linemen and linebackers during the regular season, per TruMedia. League average pressure rate for DL/LB with 450-plus defensive snaps was 11.4%; Verse avg 17.1%. Just things you come across while gathering material…

    #154776
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    In rookie Jared Verse, the Rams have the makings of their next superstar

    Jourdan Rodrigue

    LOS ANGELES — It’s hard to miss Jared Verse.

    At the snap of the ball, the Los Angeles Rams rookie outside linebacker — all 6-foot-4 and 260 pounds of him — screams off the line of scrimmage and toward the quarterback. His speed-to-power pass rush crashes into offensive linemen at absurd impact and with abnormal force, which helps explain how Verse doubled the NFL average in pressure rate in most of his games this season. After each play, his voice is a ceaseless foghorn as he smack-talks and laughs in opponents’ faces.

    “You can feel him from the sidelines,” says Rams defensive coordinator Chris Shula.

    Verse, the Rams’ No. 19 pick last April, was the lone player from the team voted to the Pro Bowl this season. His 77 regular-season pressures ranked No. 4 among all defensive linemen or linebackers, according to TruMedia, and his average 17.1 percent pressure rate was well above the league’s average of 11.4 percent for players at those positions with 450 or more snaps.

    Verse ended the regular season as oddsmakers’ favorite to win Defensive Rookie of the Year. Playing for a team eagerly awaiting its next household name on defense — after the 2022 trade of cornerback Jalen Ramsey and the retirement of defensive tackle Aaron Donald last spring — Verse is a game-wrecker in waiting, on the cusp of superstardom in Los Angeles.

    But if Verse knows anything about his first season in the league, it’s that many lessons precede greatness.

    Verse’s dad, Eric, was a marine. Now he’s an engineer. His mom, Jannienne, worked in marketing. As Jared grew up, he watched his parents work full-time to provide for him and his five siblings (two brothers, three sisters). Their parenting took communication, teamwork and care.

    Eric worked nights, sleeping while Jannienne worked during the day and waking up in time to get the kids fed after school. When Eric headed off to work, Jannienne took over until the following morning. “My dad and mom would probably go weeks without seeing each other,” Verse said. “You live around that all day — seeing how hard your family works — you’re like, ‘I have to be better.’ ”

    Navigating the world as one kid among six is a crash course in sociology, and perhaps that is why Verse initially gravitated toward the subject in college: He found he was good at studying people and their environments.

    Now, Verse’s powers of observation and analysis are double-sided skills. In part, he uses them to get inside opponents’ heads.

    “I’m always interested in how people react,” he said, “Just talking football, you can tell, Oh, this person’s gonna get mad. Once he’s mad, I’ve got him. Or another guy, he’ll talk back to me and I’m like, Once he goes quiet it’s over with.”

    In 2022, after winning All-Colonial Athletic Association honors at the University at Albany, Verse transferred to Florida State, where he became close friends with teammate Braden Fiske, another smaller-school defensive tackle transfer from Western Michigan.

    Last spring — after parting with Donald, a future Hall of Famer and perhaps the best player ever at his position — the Rams paired Verse and Fiske together as their first- and second-round picks in the draft, hoping to fast-track the defensive line’s rebuild by installing two young, dynamic players who were already used to playing at a high level together.

    Verse showed up to Los Angeles Rams OTAs in May ready to compete, and his teammates heard all about it. His voice is always a volume level above everyone else’s, and he speaks fast. Contact was not permitted in those practices. Still, snap in and snap out, Verse smack-talked anybody in the area.

    “He was pretty chatty,” veteran quarterback Matthew Stafford said, smiling. “He loves to compete, he’s an aggressive dude.”

    “When he first got here, he would bark at everybody,” added outside linebacker Byron Young, who starts opposite Verse.

    Rams coach Sean McVay saw an opportunity for the young player to grow. He pulled Verse aside. “You don’t have enemies on your own sideline,” McVay told him, challenging him to use his voice in a way that pushed his teammates in a positive direction.

    “He has an edge to him that is so healthy — I think it’s one of the special things that makes him who he is,” McVay said. “I think he knows I cared enough about him to be able to give him that honest feedback. What’s great about him is he applies it immediately.”

    Verse said he uses all of the talk to get into a flow state, a calm headspace where everything about his game is clear. He switched his tone in practice — he was still plenty loud, but in a way that lifted others.

    “He is the energy,” said Young. “When I hear his voice, I’m like ‘Oh, we’re starting to go.’ … He really motivates me to be better because I know he’s ready, he’s got my back.”

    It showed the other side of Verse’s knack for observing and understanding people. He cares hard about how he makes his teammates feel, and took it personally when McVay pointed out the early negativity.

    “He’s a really good dude,” Fiske said. “I know he’s a loud guy. He’s a loud talker. He’s constantly getting after people, yelling. But deep down he cares about people.

    “He treats people with respect, he’s gonna shake your hand and look you in the eye and talk to you. He understands what it means to be a good human — and there’s not many guys who can get on the field and flip that switch, but he’s one of those guys.”

    Fiske had two sacks in an overtime win over Seattle in Week 9. In the locker room after the game, the soft-spoken rookie naturally gravitated toward the back of the room and away from any extra attention as McVay stood in the center giving a speech and handing out game balls.

    Suddenly, Verse reached into the cluster of players and grabbed Fiske’s shoulder, pulling him into the spotlight and calling for McVay to get his teammate a ball. A video of the moment — McVay laughing in response and reassuring Verse that yes, Fiske was getting a game ball — circulated on social media.

    “I remember that (and) I’m sure coaches remember that — but for people to watch that video and see he really cares about his teammates, that’s cool to see,” Fiske said. “That means a lot.”

    “I love being a great player, I love being able to go out there and showcase my skills,” Verse said, “But when it comes to my teammates, I want them to realize that football is a small aspect of who everyone is. … I want you to realize that I care a lot about you besides the football aspect.”

    McVay has coached defensive superstars before. Donald was a household name by the time McVay took over as head coach in 2017. When L.A. traded for Ramsey in 2019, the cornerback already had a well-established reputation around the league. Verse’s energy reminds some around the Rams organization of a mixture of both players.

    “He’s got some s— to him that I really like,” said McVay. “That’s been big for our defense. I think guys feed off that and it’s a good thing. You need some guys like that. Aaron had that to him, too. He just might not have talked as loud, but the way he would stare a hole through people, they knew. Jalen Ramsey was like that. Sometimes those best defensive players, they have some stuff to them that you’re like ‘Oh man, we need that.’ You need that edge, that energy, that swagger and Jared Verse definitely has that.”

    But developing a player into greatness is an entirely different process than coaching someone who is already great. There is always a danger of getting caught up in the pressure and hype that comes along with success. A would-be superstar has to be tested. He has to fail, then respond.

    A 37-20 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 12 was Verse’s biggest setback during his rookie year. All season long, he and the Rams’ young, energetic defensive line had steadily improved, and Verse entered the game with at least one sack in three of the last four games.

    But All-Pro Eagles running back Saquon Barkley ran over and embarrassed the Rams defense. Barkley’s 302 scrimmage yards set a high mark in the NFL in 2024 as he ran for touchdowns of 70 and 72 yards.

    Verse sprinted in pursuit of Barkley on the 70-yard run, reaching 21.88 miles per hour as he did. It was just the fourth time a player of 260 pounds or more had reached that speed since 2018, according to Next Gen Stats. It didn’t matter. The play broke the Rams, who previously had kept the game within a touchdown.

    “That builds character,” said Rams VP of sports medicine and performance Reggie Scott, whose staff clocked the eye-popping speed as Verse’s highest of the season. “The right people going through the wrong situations come out better. He cares hard. When he has adversity … it’s gonna be tough for him. He’s gonna fall.

    “But he’s such ‘the right dude’ (that) he’s gonna come out even better.”

    Verse was despondent after the game and his self-talk was brutal. When he arrived at the Rams’ practice facilities in Woodland Hills, Calif., the next week, he asked his position coaches and teammates to be harder on him.

    “Winning all the time sucks,” Verse said. “It’s cool and all, everyone wants to go undefeated. But you grow 10 times more through failure than you do winning, period.”

    He wanted more accountability. If he missed a detail, they needed to point it out.

    “(That is) hard to do, especially for someone like him playing at such a high level,” said receiver Cooper Kupp. “He’s had success in this league at an early point. … For someone like that to come in and say, ‘Hey, even though I have done this and this and this, I can be that much better and I am accountable (for) the mistakes that I have made, that’s a huge thing for a guy like Jared.”

    “He wants to do good by us because he feels like he lets us down,” said Young. “If we lose a game, he always comes in and says he has to do better, he has to be better. I’m just sitting here like, ‘Bro, this is crazy. He’s a rookie.’ ”

    The following week, Verse powered through Saints tight end Foster Moreau to hit quarterback Derek Carr on fourth down at the Rams’ 9-yard line, forcing Carr’s pass to tumble incomplete. The hit sealed L.A.’s 21-14 win in New Orleans and kicked off a five-game win streak.

    “Anytime someone wants to put a tight end on him … it’s just abuse. It’s literally abuse,” offensive/defensive line analyst Brian Baldinger said when breaking down Verse’s tape the next day. “Nobody can block him. No tight end can block him. This is a chance to go win the game and Verse wins the game.”

    Verse continued to rank among the top players in the NFL in pressure rate as December continued. If his sack numbers weren’t striking, his teammates’ were: Fiske added 2 1/2 through that stretch, defensive tackle Kobie Turner had 3 and Young added 1 1/2.

    On some snaps, Verse’s quick pressures drew attention and freed up others. Other plays asked him to sacrifice for the group’s rush plan instead of trying to make his own plays and rack up his own statistics. Coaches noticed his improvement there.

    “(He) has really grown a lot. He’s coachable,” McVay said. “I think he’s really starting to understand, like we’ve talked about before, where are my play ops? What’s the intent behind some of these calls or these movements? …

    “I think he’s continuing to use all these experiences as he matures and grows. I’ve been really pleased with how he’s improved in terms of just the overall accountability and the understanding of where you can impact it, but every play might not be (your) play.”

    In the wild-card round, the young defensive line again set the tone for the entire team’s 27-9 win over the Minnesota Vikings. They sacked quarterback Sam Darnold nine times, tying a postseason record.

    Verse helped make the game-wrecking play after cornerback Ahkello Witherspoon strip-sacked Darnold, snatching up the football and running it 57 yards to the end zone, reaching a top speed of 19.88 miles per hour per Next Gen Stats and flipping in for the touchdown.

    “I did know about that speed that he hit (previously against the Eagles), which means he was doggin’ it on the touchdown yesterday,” McVay said with a smile on Tuesday. “The guy plays so hard, and that’s what you like. That represents our defense as a whole.”

    McVay had to fold a dig into his compliment, had to keep Verse a little humble and twist the knife just a bit as the rookie prepares for the matchup that was a defining point in his young career.

    A trip to Philadelphia for another shot at the Eagles and for the divisional round is on the horizon, and the Rams’ head coach is helping to mold a star.

    #154859
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #154895
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Before the 2024 draft, it was widely said that there were 3 edge rushers of 1st round quality– =Laiatu Latu, Dallas Turner, and Verse.

    Latu was picked at 15 by the Colts.
    Tuner was picked at 17 by the Vikings.
    Verse of course fell to 19 for the Rams.

    Here are their stats from the regular season:

    NAME TCKL SCK TFL QB-HITS FR
    Latu …32 … 4 … 5 … 12…1
    Turner ..20… 3 … 3 … 5 …0
    Verse …66…4.5 …11 ….18…2

    I mean, we know Verse was the best of the 3, but seeing the numbers helps drive that home.

    #154989
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from https://theramswire.usatoday.com/lists/rams-best-worst-players-2024-season-studs-duds/?taid=679b156421b267000184c8f2&utm_campaign=trueanthem&utm_medium=trueanthem&utm_source=twitter

    OLB Jared Verse

    Verse had an immediate impact on the Rams as a rookie this season, starting from Day 1 and becoming their best edge rusher throughout the year. His 89 total pressures in the regular season and playoffs were the most of any player in the NFL, consistently winning against some of the league’s best left tackles.

    He improved against the run as the season went on, too. He finished with an 85.5 pass-rush grade and 81.0 run defense grade, leading all Rams players (min. 100 snaps) with an overall grade of 89.3. The next-closest player was Kobie Turner with a grade of 75.1.

    Verse exceeded even the highest expectations in Year 1 as a pro.

    #156575
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #156902
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from PFF, 2025 NFL defensive line rankings: https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-2025-nfl-defensive-line-rankings

    9. Los Angeles Rams

    Many expected the Rams’ defensive line to fall off following Aaron Donald‘s retirement, but the unit has remained above average thanks to its young players, including a pair of impactful rookies. First-year interior defender Braden Fiske generated pressure on 13.2% of pass plays in 2024, which ranked fifth at the position, while fellow rookie Jared Verse’s 89.3 PFF overall grade placed seventh among edge defenders.

    Los Angeles added interior defender Poona Ford in the offseason, and he brings an 85.3 PFF overall grade that ranked fifth among interior defenders this past season.

    #156915
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from https://theramswire.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/rams/2025/06/25/nfc-west-edge-rushers-where-do-the-rams-rank/84232430007/?taid=685c2b2623bc9b00015a09fa&utm_campaign=trueanthem&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter

    Los Angeles Rams
    Jared Verse, Byron Young, Josaiah Stewart
    The Rams have two great edge rushers in Verse and Young, and even have third-rounder Josaiah Stewart waiting in the wings. This is a formidable unit that is among the best in the NFC West despite their youth.

    #156924
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #156926
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #156927
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #156939
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator


    .

    #156961
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #156965
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    OTA Observations: ILBs coach Greg Williams discusses performances during OTAs, impact of new faces, adapting to how teams attacked them last season

    Wyatt Miller

    https://www.therams.com/news/ota-observations-ilbs-coach-greg-williams-discusses-performances-during-otas-impact-of-new-faces-adapting-landman-paul-speights-reeder-dolac

    WOODLAND HILLS, Calif. – Rams inside linebackers coach Greg Williams directs a position group with significant roster turnover and massive responsibilities in 2025.

    The Rams lost their leading tackler from last season, inside linebacker Christian Rozeboom. In his wake, they brought in veterans and rookies to compete for snaps in a unit that is truly open for the taking.

    During OTAs, Williams discussed some of his observations with theRams.com, including impressions of new faces like veteran Nate Landman and fifth-round pick Chris “Pooh” Paul Jr. as well as how he’s adapting to the way teams attacked the Rams’ inside linebackers last season.

    Landman transitioning “seamlessly” into Rams’ defense

    After playing under Raheem Morris in Atlanta last season, the predecessor and mentor of Rams defensive coordinator Chris Shula, Landman’s transition to L.A. has been smooth. Shula said they heard great things about him from Atlanta, and he showed valuable qualities already in OTAs.

    “He’s come in and guys respect him just from where he’s been and what he’s done,” Williams told theRams.com. “He’s taken into our defense just seamlessly.”

    He’s only been in the league three years, but Landman worked his way from undrafted free agent to reliable starter in just his second professional season. He’s been more than willing to share his knowledge with a group full of similarly under-looked players in Los Angeles. His success against the run will be a welcome addition to the Rams’ defense.

    In 2023, Nate Landman played 16 games for Atlanta and had the 2nd-highest run stop percentage in the NFL among qualified linebackers.

    He’s a very good run stopper who doesn’t miss many tackles. https://t.co/QjYNEx4Gwf pic.twitter.com/LR7asLVyhH
    — Wyatt Miller (@wymill07) March 18, 2025

    Williams said he’s helped younger players understand where their eyes should be throughout certain plays and what to expect based on their observations.

    “‘Hey, if my guy does this, I’ll give you an in-call right away just because this is what I’m anticipating,'” Williams recalled Landman saying. “And it’s really good when it comes from the players because he gives them a view from behind the face mask.”

    Paul’s aggressiveness impresses: “He’s a football guy”

    When asked what Williams liked about Paul coming off a career year at Ole Miss, he answered swiftly: “Aggressiveness.”

    Williams also said “he can tackle,” evidenced by a mere 4.5% missed tackle rate last season. He also tallied 54 total stops, ranking 13th among qualified FBS inside linebackers.

    New Rams ILB Chris “Pooh” Paul Jr. was the most efficient tackler among drafted ILBs last season.

    He had the best stop rate (a tackle constituting an unsuccessful play for the offense) and missed tackle rate among the 19 players drafted at his position. pic.twitter.com/QOcdpGlMpS
    — Wyatt Miller (@wymill07) April 28, 2025

    “I don’t even think we’ve seen the best of Pooh because we don’t have pads on,” Williams said.

    Still, he’s seen enough from Paul’s mindset and physicality in a limited practice capacity to know that he has tons of potential. Roles are far from determined, but Williams would not bet against Paul forcing his way into opportunities as a rookie.

    “That kid has been unbelievable as far as his preparation,” Williams said. “He’s a football guy. It is his number one priority. So, with that being said, I’m going with him because I think he’s going to will himself to be good.”

    Last year’s faults shaping this year’s preparation

    The Rams’ run defense had its ups and downs last year. However, their late-season triumphs against the run were largely overshadowed by Saquon Barkley’s 205-yard explosion in the team’s divisional round loss to Philadelphia.

    Williams is using last year’s experiences as a blueprint for what the group needs to work on ahead of the 2025 campaign.

    “It’s been just good knowing the defense and how people are going to attack us now,” Williams said. “… It gives me a better chance of going into individual (drills), putting them in situations and letting their eye progression know like, ‘Okay, these are the ways they’re going to try to attack you, and this is the way we need to respond.'”

    Williams said they must keep better track of the ball carrier within the context of the defensive line. There are times to press the gap and times to stay home to play a gap-and-a-half – he understands those opportunities better now, and his players will too. He’s confident in that because the room is full of intelligent players who can take concepts learned in the classroom and apply them to the field quickly.

    “Once we started understanding the line movements and how the line is playing, now it gives us more freedom to understand where the ball should go if our d-line is doing what they’re supposed to,” Williams said. “… It feels way more connected.”

    Omar Speights is “the definition of preparation and professionalism”

    Speights, a 2024 undrafted free agent signing out of LSU, burst onto the scene as a rookie after Troy Reeder went down in Week 6. He took the starting job and never looked back, starting 10 games and ranking fourth on the team in total tackles with 67.

    Ahead of his sophomore season, Williams just wants Speights to continue his obsessive preparation to remain consistent all year long.

    “Omar, continue to be Omar,” Williams said. “There’s a reason why he ended up playing and a reason why he had the success he did as a rookie because of the things that he did to prepare his body, things that he did to prepare from a game plan standpoint. So for him, I told him what I wanted out of him is to continue with the consistency.

    “He is a dog. That dude, he’s the definition of preparation and professionalism. And as long as he continues to do that, he’s going to play in this league for a long time.”

    Troy Reeder provides “a comfort level”

    Reeder, who started the first six games of the season for L.A. before landing on injured reserve, was re-signed late in the free agency process. For Williams, the move provided some extra familiarity and veteran presence in a group full of young bucks.

    “Troy was the ultimate professional last year, (he) was playing well before he got injured,” Williams said. “And then even the times when he didn’t come back, he was always present in all the meetings, he was present in all the game plans and understood.

    “He was like another coach on the sideline, talking to guys and able to communicate. So having Troy in the room is actually a comfort level for me as well, just because I have another guy in the room that I have a lot of respect for and will talk to about a lot of different things.”

    Shaun Dolac “could teach you the defense right now”

    The Rams are no strangers to undrafted free agents forcing their way into snaps through grit and gumption. Dolac embodies those qualities, and the 2025 UDFA signing out of Buffalo has made a lasting impression during OTAs.

    “Shaun could probably take you out here and teach you the defense right now,” Williams said. “He is a quick study, man, he really is. And that’s one thing you respect from him… I think from the way he plays the game above the neck and the way that he had tackled in college, (if) he does that, Shaun is going to be another guy that will be somebody to reckon with.”

    Dolac led the FBS in total tackles last season with 168, averaging 12.9 per game. He fell in the draft due in large part to below-average measurements. The Rams have never valued those attributes as much as tangible skill sets, and Dolac was one of the most productive players at his position in college.

    Most coaches say that every position holds open competitions during training camp, but this is a group where that truly applies.

    #156999
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157008
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from https://www.lafbnetwork.com/nfl/la-rams/la-rams-news/los-angeles-rams-kobie-turner-execs-poll/

    Now entering his third season, [Kobie] Turner is no longer flying under the radar. He’s one of the NFL’s most disruptive interior defenders, and though he didn’t crack ESPN’s top 10 defensive tackles for 2025, he was one of just five players listed as honorable mentions in Jeremy Fowler’s executive poll.

    “He has an ability to get off the ball and establish leverage,” one high-ranking NFC personnel executive told Fowler. “He has a natural feel to be in the right place at the right time and plays with urgency. He can also close the deal when there’s a chance for a TFL, pressure or sack.”

    #157037
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157090
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157092
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from PFF: The 50 best players in the NFL ahead of the 2025 season … https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-pff50-ranking-50-best-players-2025

    47. EDGE JARED VERSE, LOS ANGELES RAMS
    The 2024 campaign was only his rookie season, but Verse proved to be one of the league’s toughest edge defenders to block. His 81 total pressures trailed only Trey Hendrickson, and he earned grades above 80.0 as a pass rusher and run defender. The one blemish was the 30% missed tackle rate in pass-rush situations, which kept him from converting more of those pressures into sacks.

    #157137
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    They do the Rams at about 1:45 in.

    #157148
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157152
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Jim Youngblood 53@53_jim70721
    Poona Ford allows Kobie Turner to play 3/4 technique. He was the nose tackle the last two years. In 2023 rotated with Brown III and last year he was moved to DE/DT.

    KObie’s natural position is likely what Aaron Donald did .. and he;s not been able to do it so far in base D

    Poona Ford will help on cutting down explosive running plays.

    Possible Rams dime defense

    Last year-This Year

    Verse–Verse-DE
    Young—Young-DE
    Turner—Turner-DT
    Fiske—Fiske-DT
    Hoecht–Stewart-MIke/Joker
    McCullough–McCoullough–“money”

    The Rams dime defense was among best in NFL last year, if not THE best

    Jim Youngblood 53@53_jim70721

    #157175
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157188
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #157192
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from https://theramswire.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/rams/2025/07/26/why-an-ex-nfl-lineman-told-jared-verse-to-watch-all-of-his-bad-plays/85378913007/?taid=6884bda9c264dd0001cc00ba&utm_campaign=trueanthem&utm_medium=trueanthem&utm_source=twitter

    …as he heads into 2025, Verse admitted he knows what he needs to correct. And he told reporters at training camp that he was instructed by former Florida State and NFL defensive tackle Cory Simon to specifically watch all of his bad plays from the 2024 season.

    “He said, ‘Hey, you had a good season. Congratulations on all you’ve done but go watch the whole season, not just your good plays but the bad plays.’ So I’ve watched every game probably about three/four times each,” Verse said Thursday. “Just watching everything I’ve done wrong and everything I’ve done right. And you realize how many bad plays you had with all the accolades and all that stuff. You realize how much [more] you can grow. And, don’t let your head get too high because now, I’m thinking of how much better I can get. People are like, ‘oh, you’re good, you’re good.’ No, I’ve got so much farther to go.”

    #157271
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

Viewing 30 posts - 1 through 30 (of 51 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

Comments are closed.