the draft … April thread

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  • #155836
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    ? I’ve seen longer lists than that…I think?

    I double-checked the date of the article before I posted it because it seemed strange.

    Dunno.

    #155838
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    ? I’ve seen longer lists than that…I think?

    I double-checked the date of the article before I posted it because it seemed strange.

    Dunno.

    If you have questions, Jourdan has answers. See Point 1.

    The Rams’ unique strategy: 5 things to remember up to the NFL Draft

    LOS ANGELES — The NFL Draft is next week, which means the Los Angeles Rams are nearly done with their process of meeting with scouts and coaches on strategy and closing arguments for or against prospects.

    Right now, L.A. picks at No. 26 in the first round — a position general manager Les Snead has referred to (whenever in the 20s in general) as “purgatory.” Snead and head coach Sean McVay will explore their options at the pick point, inclusive to trading back for more picks.

    The Rams, as most fans know by now, approach the draft and scouting process uniquely. Last season, I released a two-part series called “Finding Rams” that illustrated a year spent with their scouting department to explain how, and why, they think about the draft the way they do. As we reach the peak of “draft buzz season” in the final days before the first round begins, I thought it would be helpful to summarize a few key items to keep in mind about their methods:

    1. The Rams don’t do ’30’ visits or private workouts
    Teams are allowed to host up to 30 prospects in their building for pre-draft visits each year and most bring in at least a few. The Rams do not. They don’t send top executives or high-ranking coaches (including Snead and McVay) to private workouts, either. Instead, Snead deploys a few trusted scouts to spend a day with prospects the Rams want more information on at either their college or their high school (if the player is in their hometown), which the NFL allows. The “30” visits have to be reported to the league. Visits to the prospect within a 50-mile radius of their college or hometown do not, which is why the Rams’ don’t often leak. When a prospect is connected to a “Rams visit” in the media after the combine into the third week of April, this is what it means. Andy Sugarman, Steve Miller and Kellen Clemens are all special assistants to the general manager and they are usually the scouts conducting these visits.

    2. All-Star events are attended covertly and the main goal is gathering player surveys
    The Rams don’t send the majority of their front office and scouting staff, nor any coaches, to All-Star offseason events such as the East-West Shrine Bowl, scouting combine or Senior Bowl. At the combine, the entire medical staff attends in order to get crucial and official medical information shared among the 32 teams. Some scouts attend the events, though do so under the radar (they don’t use their booths in the testing stadiums, for example) and the key objective is to issue a personality test to players that was designed by internal experts with the team. The 28-question test takes players about six minutes to complete. The goal is to get about 300 tests completed and input into JAARS to be analyzed and weighed among other evaluations.

    3. What is JAARS?
    Most NFL teams have a data and information processing system, usually constructed in-house, into which scouts, coaches, medical staff, front-office executives and others input notes on players (you might be surprised to learn that some teams don’t!).

    The Rams call theirs a “Joint After-Action Review System,” or JAARS. It was built over a decade ago by former director of data and analytics Jake Temme and developer Ryan Garlisch. JAARS tracks players in the scouting process well before they are in the Rams’ building, then logs hundreds of data points including medical and sports science information (such as speed during practice movements using GPS trackers, force output in the weight room, etc.) as players continue their careers there. It also tracks players outside of their building for pro personnel purposes, though they have less personal data on those players.

    Because the many data points on prospects can be combined, built into projection models and/or compared with other combinations for other prospects, JAARS helps scouts and analysts debate where they position players on their draft board (Snead keeps players organized into nine buckets).

    The language of JAARS is unique to Snead’s own preferred communication. Scouting reports used to be thousands of words in length per prospect. In JAARS, players are described in detail using simple colored tabs, shapes and symbols and gradients to illustrate changing opinion over time.

    From “Finding Rams”: JAARS tabs, which have movable sliding scales, contain information on anything from character and mental assessments to medical history, athletic testing results and the composite scores built by weighing the different results together. The number of total tabs along a row varies by position — some weigh over a dozen different physical traits.

    There is a section where staff can easily access film cut-ups and a section for “chatter” — leaks, agent-driven reports, videos of workouts shared on social media, quotes from news conferences and more. There is also a section for anonymous surveys … that gather a variety of opinions from scouts after each position evaluation to help the group better understand its consensus or disagreements. Consensus opinions of prospects’ top strengths are “superpowers,” while weaknesses are “kryptonite.” A section called “the wisdom of the crowd” references group opinions or collective findings.

    4. Snead’s call sheet
    Snead “calls” the draft similarly to how a coach calls a game, including his use of a sheet that looks a lot like one of the giant play cards coaches often hold on the sidelines, though his is digital and displayed on a massive double screen in the draft room. The sheet looks like a series of rectangles that split players by position into four overall tiers and nine different buckets. They are organized in those buckets by their JAARS tab (Snead can immediately recall an evaluation because he instantly sees the tab color and some of the symbols in the tab). There are no round-by-round grades. By mid-April, all draft-eligible players are split into the buckets based on the Rams’ finished evaluations, which include the medical and character checks completed in March and, for some, notes from the traveling visits. The buckets aren’t always “rankings” — some are lateral to others.

    From “Finding Rams”: Where McVay groups preferred plays together depending on different scenarios and scribbles notes to himself in the margins, Snead groups positions and players on a massive screen in JAARS, moving between the nine buckets and using the program’s simplified language — colors, badges, one-liners such as “superpower” and “kryptonite” — to get quick refreshers on that prospect.

    5. The Rams reorganized their staff after the departure of James Gladstone and Temme
    While most of the scouting and evaluation process was complete by the time Gladstone, the Rams’ previous director of scouting strategy, got the general manager job in Jacksonville, Snead had to fill Gladstone’s key role as the conductor of their entire draft operation during the three days. Nicole Blake, who previously worked as a strategist and analyst under Gladstone, will fill that position as the Rams’ new director of scouting strategy and analytics. She is 29.

    Temme was hired by Gladstone in March. His role has not yet been directly filled, but the Rams will have to find ways to support Garlisch and continue to evolve JAARS as new technology and player data does the same.

    Meanwhile, 32-year-old John McKay is the first titled assistant GM under Snead in the Snead/McVay era. McKay and director of pro personnel Matt Waugh, who also serve as remote scouts during the prospect evaluation portion of the year, will continue to lead the college free agency process in the hectic hours after the final round of the draft.

    The 23 members of the scouting and analyst department, minus Blake, McKay and Waugh, work remotely. Those people will arrive in L.A. several days before the draft for final arguments, surveys such as the “Make him a Ram” assessment that famously paired 2024 first- and second-rounders Jared Verse and Braden Fiske together and strategy meetings with coaches.

    #155840
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    The rams have a 29 year-old female director of scouting strategy?

    Cool.

    w
    v

    #155841
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Zooey wrote:
    zn wrote:
    ? I’ve seen longer lists than that…I think?

    I double-checked the date of the article before I posted it because it seemed strange.

    Dunno.

    If you have questions, Jourdan has answers. See Point 1.

    Rams fly under the radar.

    ‪Jourdan Rodrigue‬ ‪@jourdanrodrigue.bsky.social‬
    The Rams approach several elements of the pre-draft process in unique fashion, so I thought a refresher might be helpful to keep in mind in these days before the draft

    #155842
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    THE BEAST IS HERE Extraordinary, incredible work by @danebrugler.bsky.social and the editing and design/visuals team @theathletic.bsky.social : http://www.nytimes.com/athletic/569…

    Jourdan Rodrigue (@jourdanrodrigue.bsky.social) 2025-04-09T13:33:05.786Z

    #155843
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    The 2024 draft was just so impossibly good. They needed a top edge rusher after years of rentals and weak lower draft picks at the position, and…the defensive rookie of the year was there at pick 19.

    😲

    #155846
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    The rams have a 29 year-old female director of scouting strategy?

    Cool.

    w
    v

    I did a double-take on that as well. I would be interested to know how she climbed the ranks in a man’s world so quickly. I bet she’s pretty interesting.

    #155847
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    The 2024 draft was just so impossibly good. They needed a top edge rusher after years of rentals and weak lower draft picks at the position, and…the defensive rookie of the year was there at pick 19.

    😲

    Speaking of that guy. It’s safe to say he hasn’t hit his ceiling yet. The best is yet to come, and that DL just might be very entertaining to watch this year.

    #155848
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Nicole Blake has a BA from Duke and an MBA from Stanford.

    This is from a Women’s History Month thing the Rams put together, and is on therams.com.

    Stu Jackson

    Nicole Blake is one of the few women working in scouting in the NFL, and what got her there is what she said is the most important skill a person can have.

    “I started my career at the NFL’s league office and made my way to the Rams after honing in on what I was really passionate about, which is the game and roster building and the strategic components of both of those things,” Blake said. “I’m a big believer that the most important skill is curiosity – if you’re truly interested in a field and let curiosity guide your work, you’ll end up naturally falling into all of the knowledge and skills that you need.” (Me: So Brains + Passion. Not surprising she has those ingredients).

    Today, she helps shape those areas as Scouting Strategist for the Rams.

    Blake said her role is a blend of three buckets: General draft strategy, the Rams’ scouting structure and processes, plus data and analytics. She joined the team as a consultant in 2021 while finishing grad school, but this is her second season in a full-time capacity with the organization.

    “The best part of the job is the culmination of the work, whether that’s draft weekend or the season,” Blake said. “Love seeing the time and effort from our entire staff come together into final decisions or an output on the field.”

    In terms of the importance of young people seeing women like her in her position, Blake said she thinks it’s important generally to send the message to young people that they can do anything they want to do.

    “And sometimes that requires seeing people similar to them – by gender, race, hometown or some other trait – in fields that they might be interested in,” Blake said. “The more smart, young people we can get involved in football, the better.”

    While there have been numerous women Blake has looked up to and who have influenced her in various ways – professors, former bosses, coworkers, etc. – the most influential in her career “by far” has been her mom.

    “People like to say that you can’t do it all, or at least not at a high level, but she ran her own business and raised triplets with my dad without ever dropping a single ball,” Blake said. “She’s given me confidence from a young age that I could do the same.”

    For Blake, what motivates her every day is her own internal drive.

    “It’s a bit cliché but I’ve always innately enjoyed the process of learning or growing or trying to get better, so that competition with myself often ends up being my biggest source of motivation,” Blake said. “Really enjoy trying to set the bar higher.”

    Though Blake may be one of only a handful of women working in scouting in the league, she said it feels like there are more women getting involved in the NFL all the time since joining the Rams, “which is great.”

    “I’ll always be a proponent of people who love the sport and are good at what they do getting opportunities, regardless of identity,” she said. “I’m fortunate to say I rarely think about or have my attention drawn to any difference in gender working with the Rams, which speaks to the quality of the organization.”

    When it comes to celebrating Women’s History Month, Blake points to learning more about historic female figures.

    “I’m a big fan of history, and really enjoy reading about the female figures from the early 20th century – Susan B Anthony, Alice Paul – who had a huge impact on the rights that women hold today,” Blake said. “Diving into their stories is a great way to celebrate.”

    #155849
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Nicole Blake, who previously worked as a strategist and analyst under Gladstone, will fill that position as the Rams’ new director of scouting strategy and analytics.

    Nicole Blake is one of the few women working in scouting in the NFL

    Ah, so…an obvious DEI hire. The government should step in and deport Snead.

    It’s bad enough that we have a DEI hire covering the Rams for The Athletic.

    #155851
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Ah, so…an obvious DEI hire. The government should step in and deport Snead.

    It’s bad enough that we have a DEI hire covering the Rams for The Athletic.

    I can be really dense sometimes. The obvious answer was right in front of me, no research required.

    Soon we’ll learn that Mina Kimes is actually transgender, and the whole picture will be complete.

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