Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › post-draft roster assessments & rankings
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May 5, 2021 at 9:55 pm #129694znModerator
Post-Draft NFL Power Rankings via @PriscoCBS!
Thoughts 🤔 pic.twitter.com/jgHvz8xJUV
— CBS Sports HQ (@CBSSportsHQ) May 6, 2021
May 7, 2021 at 2:39 pm #129732znModeratorfrom Pete Prisco, NFL Power Rankings…after 2021 NFL Draft: https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/powerrankings/
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RAMS Getting Matt Stafford to go with that dominant defense should help this team get in the playoff mix again. But will not having first-round picks for five years come back to bite this team?
May 12, 2021 at 2:50 pm #129858znModeratorRams confident in line, go all-in on adding explosive playmakers to offense
Lindsey Thiry
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Improving coach Sean McVay’s offense has been among the Los Angeles Rams’ top offseason goals.
That became apparent when the Rams completed a blockbuster trade two weeks after a divisional playoff loss to the Green Bay Packers. Quarterback Jared Goff, two first-round picks and a fourth-round pick were shipped to Detroit in exchange for Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford.
Then in free agency, the Rams signed veteran receiver DeSean Jackson to a one-year, $4.5 million deal, reuniting McVay with one of his top weapons when he served as offensive coordinator in Washington.
And finally, with their first pick in the NFL draft, the Rams selected speedy Louisville receiver Tutu Atwell in the second round.
Now the question looms: Did the Rams do enough to stop the consecutive season decline of their offense and jolt it back to the top of the NFL as they make a push to appear in Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium next February?
“There’s no reason that we don’t have very realistic expectations about being a lot better,” said McVay, who is entering his fifth season as coach. “I expect us to be much better and I expect this to be one of the better ones in the league.”
The Rams return eight of 11 starters from an offense that ranked 22nd in efficiency and provided inconsistent support to their top-ranked defense throughout a 10-6 season.
Receivers Robert Woods and Cooper Kupp, tight end Tyler Higbee and running back Cam Akers are among the key returners. Receiver Van Jefferson could play an increased role after he flashed during training camp as a rookie, but saw limited game action.
Goff, receiver Josh Reynolds and center Austin Blythe are the starters who have departed.
Despite losing Blythe to the Kansas City Chiefs in free agency, the Rams did not address the position in the draft. McVay said Brian Allen, Coleman Shelton or Austin Corbett could fill the role.
A fourth-year pro, Allen started nine games in 2019 before suffering a season-ending knee injury. Shelton has no NFL experience at the position and Corbett’s pro experience at center is limited to the preseason, though he has started 23 games over the last two seasons at guard.
The Rams also did not add any offensive lineman via free agency or the draft despite only adding one linemen in 2019 and with three — Allen, Corbett and tackle Joe Noteboom — set to become unrestricted free agents after the season.
“We’ve got 11 guys who’ve played games that we won,” Rams general manager Les Snead said about the line. “That’s probably as deep a group that’s played as I’ve ever been a part of. So, give those guys credit and they’ve done a heck of a job.”
With the Rams intent on contending for a division title and making a deep playoff run, the positions that came into focus were those that could infuse explosive plays to an offense that fell stagnant a year ago and was considered the Achilles’ heel of a team otherwise poised to make a Super Bowl run.
“We definitely expect to be more explosive,” McVay said, adding “you’ve got to give guys an opportunity to create big plays in a variety of ways.”
Without a true deep-threat receiver last season, the Rams ranked 18th in yards per play (5.54), 21st in passing yards per attempt (7.09) and 26th in passing attempts that were 20 yards more down field (9% of attempts).
With Stafford, McVay is expected to open the playbook and restore an offense that was among the league’s most explosive in 2017 and 2018.
‘There was definitely an intentional approach and process to being able to add a quarterback of Matthew Stafford’s caliber and then surround him with the right pieces,” McVay said about the team’s offseason moves.
Last season in Detroit, Stafford averaged 7.55 yards per attempt (ranked 12th) and 11.7% of his passes were attempts of 20 yards or more downfield (10th).
McVay is expected to call plays that cater to Stafford’s arm strength.
“Sean does a great job of seeing who he has available, who can make plays and getting those guys to football as much as possible,” Stafford said in March. “I feel comfortable with where he’s at, where he is as a playcaller and then making sure he’s going to get us into some great plays.”
After the Rams’ offense shrunk to short and intermediate passes last season, the addition of Jackson and Atwell is expected to create more deep-threat opportunities and create more room in the middle of the field for Woods and Kupp, who each saw their production fall last season after reaching 1,000 receiving yards each in 2019.
“We were able to add guys that bring an elite trade in terms of the ability to stretch the top shelf of the defense,” McVay said. “That’s not exclusive to the ways that you can utilize these guys, but we do want to become a more explosive offense.”
Jackson has recorded the most 60-plus-yard touchdowns (24) in NFL history and ranks sixth all-time in yard per reception (17.4). Though the 34-year-old has dealt with injuries the past two seasons, Jackson expressed confidence he’s on the mend and can remain healthy in his 14th NFL season.
“I’m feeling great, I’m feeling that I’m 100% healthy,” Jackson said in March. “The rehab process has been going very well.”
If Jackson’s injury bug continues, the Rams have an insurance policy in Atwell, who was the No. 57 overall selection and who McVay says possesses some similarities to his more seasoned counterpart.
“He really does an excellent job of tracking the ball effortlessly down the field,” McVay said about Atwell. “I like everything that he stands for, the explosiveness, play-making ability.”
With a mostly virtual offseason, the Rams new-look offense is expected to start taking shape on the field during mandatory minicamp July 15-17.
May 17, 2021 at 10:39 pm #129953znModeratorfrom PFF’s NFL Power Rankings for the 2021 NFL season
https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-power-rankings-for-the-2021-nfl-season
1. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS
Super Bowl Win Probability: 15.1%
Highest-Graded Player: TE Travis Kelce (93.5)2. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS
Super Bowl Win Probability: 16.0%
Highest-Graded Player: QB Tom Brady (92.5)3. BUFFALO BILLS
Super Bowl Win Probability: 7.5%
Highest-Graded Player: QB Josh Allen (90.9)4. GREEN BAY PACKERS
Super Bowl Win Probability: 13.8%
Highest-Graded Player: QB Aaron Rodgers (94.5)5. BALTIMORE RAVENS
Super Bowl Win Probability: 4.2%
Highest-Graded Player: LT Ronnie Stanley (79.9)6. LOS ANGELES RAMS
Super Bowl Win Probability: 4.0%
Highest-Graded Player: DI Aaron Donald (94.5)May 19, 2021 at 10:45 am #129984znModeratorfrom NFL Power Rankings 2021: 1-32 poll, plus the most improved offseason teams and players who benefited from the draft
4. Los Angeles Rams
Players who benefited most from draft: OL Brian Allen, Coleman Shelton and Austin Corbett
The Rams lost center Austin Blythe to the Chiefs in free agency and did not draft a replacement. That means Allen, Shelton and Corbett will compete for the starting job in 2021 and possibly earn the opportunity snap to quarterback Matthew Stafford for several seasons beyond. Allen has the most experience after starting nine games as a second-year pro in 2019, but he has not appeared in a game since suffering a season-ending knee injury that year. Shelton has no NFL experience at the position, and Corbett, who started the past two seasons at guard, has played the position in only the preseason. — Lindsey Thiry
May 22, 2021 at 6:09 pm #130058znModeratorMay 24, 2021 at 7:46 am #130075znModeratorfrom Peter King, NFL Power Rankings: https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2021/05/23/nfl-power-rankings-peter-king-fmia/?cid=fmiatw
[Note: 1-5 are KC, Tampa, Buffalo, Cleveland, & SF]
6. L.A. Rams (10-6, lost divisional game to Green Bay)
Troy Aikman told Sam Farmer of the Los Angeles Times the other day that Matthew Stafford could be the NFL MVP this year on a Rams team with a very good defense and a smart play-designer and play-caller like Sean McVay. Aikman’s right. Someone could waste a lot of time on a doctoral thesis apportioning blame for the Lions’ postseason futility in Stafford’s 12 Detroit seasons, but the fact is, he was the most important player for the Lions for 12 years and the team never won a division title or a postseason game in his era. At 33, Stafford now has the offensive backing and a stout-enough defense to be great in January. Sean McVay wants to go back to the 2017-18 version of his offense, with the deep passing game opening everything up. In 2018, the Rams’ top three wideouts averaged 14.2, 15.1 and 14.2 yards per catch. When Jared Goff lost his fastball and McVay lost faith in him in 2020, the wideout leaders averaged 10.4, 10.6 and 11.9 per catch. Stafford’s going to have every chance to prove Aikman right.…
May 26, 2021 at 8:28 pm #130137znModerator -
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