Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › post-draft NFC West thread
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zn.
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May 2, 2026 at 7:45 am #163802
znModeratorWhat’s the REAL problem with the San Francisco 49ers draft?@JohnMiddlekauff explains how HC Kyle Shanahan & GM John Lynch not “clustering players” impacts their draft process. pic.twitter.com/rMyPnpnJl2
— 3 & OUT with John Middlekauff (@3andout_pod) May 2, 2026
May 7, 2026 at 10:49 am #163881
znModerator“The team didn’t make a mistake. All the team did is evaluate a player differently than you did. Nothing’s a mistake right now. This is how the Niners evaluated De’Zhaun Stribling.”
Over 40 minutes on the 49ers with Greg Cosell: pic.twitter.com/3qdrCR4Jee
— David Lombardi (@LombardiHimself) May 7, 2026
May 8, 2026 at 1:31 am #163898
znModeratorJPA@jasrifootball
The Cardinals have informed Jacoby Brissett that he will be the team’s starting QB in 2026, per
@joshweinfussThey are in discussions on a contract adjustment that will pay him an amount that will reflect his QB1 spot.
May 8, 2026 at 12:06 pm #163899
ZooeyModerator
The 49ers offered Jennings $17 million/yr last year, I think for 4 years. He rejected it.
May 8, 2026 at 1:36 pm #163901
znModerator“I think it's a good fit because of Lafleur's background… You're dealing with a quarterback that KNOWS how to play the position from the pocket.”
“He’s more like a Jared Goff…”@GregCosell breaks down Carson Beck’s fit with the Arizona Cardinals: https://t.co/RBqhOpq288 pic.twitter.com/f0ExXPzImq
— Ross Tucker Podcast (@RossTuckerPod) May 8, 2026
May 12, 2026 at 6:07 pm #163933
wvParticipantSeahawks add a pass-rusher
May 12, 2026 at 7:00 pm #163934
znModeratorSeahawks add a pass-rusher
Dante Fowler Jr., who was with the Rams 2018-19.
It hardly seems fair that other teams have a personnel option the Rams don’t have–namely, signing ex-Rams.
…
May 12, 2026 at 11:20 pm #163935
HramParticipantAre you saying that in the entire history of galactic civilization, at least since the NFL/AFL merger, that there isn’t a single ram that signed with another team then later came back to the rams? 🐏
May 12, 2026 at 11:28 pm #163936
znModeratorAre you saying that in the entire history of galactic civilization, at least since the NFL/AFL merger, that there isn’t a single ram that signed with another team then later came back to the rams?
Now it’s not just players, it’s coaches.
The Rams are at a disadvantage because unlike all 31 other teams, they don’t get to raid the Rams coaching staff.
May 13, 2026 at 9:25 am #163939
wvParticipantMina’s top three coaches:
1 McVay
2 MacDonald
3 ShanahanMay 13, 2026 at 10:30 am #163940
wvParticipantMina points out last year, in the second half of the season, the Seahawks offense was 26th in QBR, and 30th in red-zone efficiency — and they went 8-1.
Seemed to me, after the Darnold-melt-down game against the Rams, MacDonald changed the offensive approach. Looked to me like he reined-in Darnold a bit, ran a more conservative, safe offense. It worked.
w
vMay 15, 2026 at 2:17 am #163961
znModeratorKirk Cousins details how Seahawks’ L.O.B. and ‘Dark Side’ defenses differ
There are lots of similarities between the Seattle Seahawks’ “Legion of Boom” and “Dark Side” defenses.
Kirk Cousins: What makes Seahawks’ defense so hard to face
Both propelled the Seahawks to the NFL mountaintop, with the L.O.B. hoisting the Lombardi Trophy in February 2014 and the Dark Side doing the same this past February.
And both stamped themselves as the NFL’s premier defense, with the L.O.B. boasting the league’s top-ranked scoring defense for four straight seasons from 2012-15 and the Dark Side following suit with the league’s top-ranked scoring defense this past season.
But from a schematic perspective, the two defenses were starkly different.
Few know that better than four-time Pro Bowl quarterback Kirk Cousins. Cousins faced the Pete Carroll-era Seahawks a combined six times between 2014 and 2021 with Washington and the Minnesota Vikings, and then faced the Mike Macdonald-era Hawks each of the past two seasons with the Atlanta Falcons.
Cousins, who’s now with the Las Vegas Raiders, detailed the differences between the two Seahawks defenses during a wide-ranging conversation last week on Seattle Sports’ Brock and Salk.
The L.O.B. defense
As Cousins explained, the Legion of Boom-era Seahawks ran a relatively simple scheme. But even though opposing offenses knew what to predict, it usually didn’t matter, as the L.O.B.’s otherworldly collection of talent was simply that superior.
“You knew the call before you broke the huddle,” Cousins said. “It was gonna be spot drop, 3-4 under, with a carry side and a spot drop side. It was gonna be five guys on the line of scrimmage. You’re gonna get Kam Chancellor usually down in the box, Earl Thomas in the post. Sherman was gonna play on top and outside at corner. … And you knew Cliff Avril and Michael Bennett were gonna be screaming off the edge when you got in pass down situations.
“It was very straightforward,” he added. “It was just hard to attack. … I’ve always said the biggest flex is to to say, here we are, do your best. When everybody knows where you’re going to be and you still can’t beat it, that’s pretty tough. That’s pretty humbling.”
The Dark Side defense
Meanwhile, Seattle’s current defense features a cutting-edge scheme under Macdonald that’s difficult for opposing quarterbacks to decipher.
“I think it starts certainly with reading coverage, and they make it muddy,” Cousins said. “Late in the play, it can still look very similar, one coverage to another. If I know it’s gonna be single-high man, that may dictate that I work a certain place on the field. But if it’s a different coverage – quarters let’s say – then I may work a totally different place on the field.
“So if you can make single-high man and quarters – which are reasonably different coverages – look the same as long as possible in the down, the quarterback doesn’t know whether he should be going left or should be going right. And if you can create that unsettledness in the quarterback’s eyes and mind, then advantage defense.
“So I think Mike just has done a good job coaching his safeties, coaching his secondary, to maintain that unsettledness for the quarterback throughout the game and marrying different coverages. … Even after snapping the ball, (you’re like), I still don’t really know what you’re going to do here.”
Which is tougher to face?
So, which Seahawks defense was harder to face? The L.O.B. or the Dark Side?
Cousins sidestepped answering that question, and instead pointed to one of the commonalities between the two iconic units.
“I’ve always said, if you can take away explosives and make offenses earn it on the short gains over and over and over – and there really are no freebies, no easy plays throughout the game – those are the hardest defenses to go against, where it’s going to be hard-earned for four quarters,” Cousins said.
“And I think in both cases, those defenses took away the explosives.”
May 17, 2026 at 8:41 am #163986
znModeratorThe Cardinals are currently listed as an underdog in all 17 of their games this season, including 1.5-point underdogs at home vs. the Jets in Week 15 😳 @DKSports pic.twitter.com/TMvc6akBEE
— ESPN BET (@ESPNBET) May 15, 2026
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