Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
znModeratorJune 13, 2023 at 9:38 pm in reply to: the 2023 OL thread (w/ definitive article posted on 5/30) #144369
znModeratorPFF still ranks Rams offensive line among worst groups heading into 2023 season. https://t.co/7Te1QuIO1p
— Blaine Grisak š (@bgrisakTST) June 13, 2023
znModeratorElvis
3 of the top dead money teams for 2023 are the Rams, Bucs and Eagles.
Eagles were in the SB last year, are expected to be good this year and have over $54 mil in dead cap. Howie Roseman is generally considered to be a genius.
Rams won the SB in ’21 with a ton of dead cap. Bucs won it in ’20. It’s okay to take on future cap debt in the quest for a Lombardi.
I think a lot of people have this wrong while the Howie Rosemans and Les Sneads of the world have it right.
znModeratorThe ENTIRE West Virginia State Police department is under sexual misconduct investigation.
James Endicott@o76923The saga of the West Virginia State Police is so over the top youād dismiss a movie on it as unrealistic. A whistleblower sent a letter detailing cops robbing a casino, covering up a murder, drunken fight clubs, and affairs then the entire department tried to bury it..Setting up cameras in the womenās changing room in order to peep on the Junior Trooper Academy is just the first part of it that is leaking from their cover up because there are so many victims willing to testify.What to know about the West Virginia State Police scandal
As a dizzying number of allegations have emerged, hereās what you need to know.Public spats between high-ranking officials. Anonymous letters and lawsuit threats. A cast of characters longer than a blockbuster movie and a laundry list of allegations that seems to grow every day.
The scandal that has rocked the West Virginia State Police is shocking, complicated and confusing.
But with more investigations vowed ā including a federal probe and numerous civil lawsuits ā itās clear that the scope of the allegations are far-reaching and may impact the state for years to come.
Hereās what we know and what we donāt.
What is being investigated?
Sometime last year, an anonymous letter was sent to the office of Gov. Jim Justice, alleging over a dozen incidents of misconduct within the State Police. It detailed drunken fights, office affairs, misspent funds, overtime theft, sexual assaults, and how a trooper had installed a hidden camera in the womenās locker room at the State Police Training Academy.
The letter worked its way through the state government like a slow-burning fuse. In the last few weeks, it has exploded. After the letter was sent to legislators and described by media outlets in mid-February, the governor confirmed several acts of misconduct among troopers. State Police Superintendent Jan Cahill has resigned under pressure from Justice. And State Police have arrested a trooper on domestic violence charges, which his attorney says are retaliation for speaking out.
Yet despite the revelations, critical elements of the sprawling scandal remain unknown. Most of the allegations in the letter have neither been publicly substantiated nor disproven. And Justice has not released the results of an initial investigation he said was completed over a week ago, despite vowing to be āone-thousand percent transparent.ā
Meanwhile, Cahill has vigorously defended himself, saying he is āa fall guyā who was kept in the dark about the entire inquiry until Justice pressured him to resign.
Justice has spoken publicly and released the most information about three incidents:
An alleged theft by a state police trooper at the Mardi Gras Casino in Cross Lanes in 2021
Alleged video taping inside the womenās locker room at the State Police Academy in Institute.
The death of a man during an encounter with state police on Interstate 81 in the Eastern
Justice has provided the most information about an alleged theft of roughly $750 by a veteran state police officer at the Mardi Gras Casino.A video released of the 2021 incident shows the man, who has not been identified, picking up an envelope off the chair of the slot machine.
The officer ultimately returned the money and hasnāt been charged with a crime. He resigned last month after the incident was brought to light.
Justice said that the officer should have been fired and accused Cahill, the superintendent at the time, of botching the investigation. Cahill has said he did not have the ability to fire the officer.
How did a camera get in the womenās locker room at the State Police Academy? How long was it there?
When Justice spoke to the media on March 20, he described how a state trooper had installed a camera in the womenās locker room at the State Police Training Academy in Institute. Justice said that when troopers discovered evidence of women being taped, they destroyed it.
Justice did not name the trooper in question, but said he was deceased. Itās also unclear when the taping began, when it stopped, whether there is any additional footage or whether any other troopers were involved.
Cahill told MetroNews that he was aware of only one woman who had been filmed and that she didnāt want there to be any further investigation.
But on March 23, Wheeling-based attorney Teresa Toriseva sent a letter to the State Police, notifying the agency that several women who used the locker room at the Academy intend to sue.
She said in an interview that she now has eight clients and that dozens more have contacted her office. She said that itās not only state troopers who may have been videotaped but that police officers from agencies all across the state use the facility for training.
āIn the last decade, any woman who was a police officer in West Virginia had to come through and now has to ask this question: Was I taped?ā she said.
Toriseva says her clients feel violated by the possible videotaping but are still āproud of their service as law enforcement officers.ā
How did a man die on I-81 after a struggle with police?
Edmond Exline, 45, died in February after a struggle with State Police troopers on I-81 in Berkeley County.
The death of Edmond Exline has also become part of the ongoing investigation. Exline died late Feb. 12 after a struggle with state troopers on I-81 near the Maryland border.
Details are sparse. The State Police have released little information. Even Exlineās family is still in the dark about what happened.
Sarah Hartman-Exline, Edmond Exlineās sister-in-law, said Maryland state troopers knocked on their door in Hagerstown, M.D, at about 2:30 a.m. They then informed her and her husband that Exline was dead.
She said she and her husband made more than 100 phone calls to the West Virginia State Police to gather details about Exlineās death. A trooper eventually told her that Exline, 45, was encountered by officers after a 911 caller reported an intoxicated man walking on the highway.
Exlineās family said he suffered from schizophrenia, which often caused him to act erratically.
Hartman-Exline said the trooper told her that a Taser was used on Exline, that numerous officers were involved, and that there was a five-minute window where the troopers didnāt respond to the dispatcher.
Both Justice and Cahill have watched the video and described it as unsettling.
āThe audio concerned me right off the bat, the commands, the screaming,ā Cahill said.
On March 2, Governor Justiceās Chief of Staff, Brian Abraham, sent a memo to Cahill asking for a trove of information, including text messages and emails from Cahill and 12 other members of the State Police. The request appears to be related to Exlineās death, as the date range begins the morning after the incident.
Justice said that prosecutors reviewing the case had asked him not to release the video but that he intends to do so in the future.
Meanwhile, Exlineās family is still mourning his death.
Brian Exline, Edmondās brother, said his brother left behind one adult child. He described his brother as a genius with his hands, who ācould literally take apart anything and put it back together.ā
That included a 1962 Buick Skylark Convertible Edmond rebuilt with their father when the boys were young.
Who is the whistleblower?
No one has publicly confirmed that they are the whistleblower who wrote the anonymous letter. However, David Moye, the attorney for Sgt. Joseph Comer, has said State Police believe his client is the whistleblower.
Moye has not confirmed Comer wrote the letter, but that Comer reported similar concerns to State Police leaders. Moye also alleged that State Police retaliated against Comer when they arrested him on charges of domestic battery and felony strangulation on February 24.
In an interview with WSAZ News, he said that Comer had a State Police administrative hearing scheduled on the day he was arrested.
āI believe that they came as a smokescreen trying to prohibit him from testifying,ā Moye said about the charges. He said that the charges stemmed from an incident in December and described them as being āabsolutely false.ā
What other State Police scandals have there been?
This is not the first scandal for the West Virginia State Police, which has been plagued by misconduct allegations over the decades.
One of the most notable cases of misconduct was the work of former forensic technician Fred Zain, estimated to have falsified evidence in 182 cases during the 80s and 90s. He was set to be retried on fraud charges related to testimony he gave in a criminal trial when he died from cancer in 2002.
In 1999, State Trooper Gary Messenger II was sentenced to seven years in prison for beating a McDowell County man who had complained about a party where state troopers were firing their guns at an American Legion hall in Welch.
Justice also confirmed in a press conference last week that the FBI is investigating allegations that a state trooper raped a woman in December 2021.
What happens next?
Justice has said that he directed interim State Police Superintendent Jack Chambers to investigate all allegations of wrongdoing alongside an investigation by the state Department of Homeland Security.
A special prosecutor from Grant County is investigating Exlineās death ā and Justice has said that federal investigators are also involved in some elements of the State Police probe, although their focus is unclear.
There is no public timetable for any of the investigations, but Justice has indicated that investigators have continued to find evidence of wrongdoing.
āThe more we dug, the more it stunk,ā he said.
znModeratorThe ENTIRE West Virginia State Police department is under sexual misconduct investigation.Ā
James Endicott@o76923The saga of the West Virginia State Police is so over the top you’d dismiss a movie on it as unrealistic. A whistleblower sent a letter detailing cops robbing a casino, covering up a murder, drunken fight clubs, and affairs then the entire department tried to bury it..Setting up cameras in the women’s changing room in order to peep on the Junior Trooper Academy is just the first part of it that is leaking from their cover up because there are so many victims willing to testify.
znModerator.@RamsNFL Stafford to Kupp in 2021 as good as a WB/WR Connection can get. #BaldysBreakdowns pic.twitter.com/YocSI5ta1B
— Brian Baldinger (@BaldyNFL) June 11, 2023
znModeratorThe best defensive player at each position per our offseason analyst rankings āļø pic.twitter.com/OafAo5X8Ff
— PFF (@PFF) June 11, 2023
znModeratorPurity culture is so fvcked. pic.twitter.com/uQeh9cG9wn
— AskAubry š¦ (@ask_aubry) June 10, 2023
znModeratorRams fans! Wanna sneak peak at the new training facility in Woodland Hills? Hereās a rendering. This is NOT what the final product will look like but will give you an idea of the footprint. The Rams will be moving their offices into the old Aetna building you see above fields. pic.twitter.com/oRdbZHgzWO
— TY (@tbearde) June 10, 2023
znModeratorI tried posting the full article with the link but it is not appearing on the board.
Fixed!
Except you have to get to the vid throught the article link and I can’t get the vid to play.
znModeratorStetson Bennett has been DEALING at Rams OTAās.
Bennettās āathleticismā has reportedly stood out throughout OTAās.
Cooper Kupp recently noted that Bennett has made some āreally big-time throwsā in practices.
The Rams rookie QB is impressing EARLY. pic.twitter.com/hUcuQOA8qt
— NFL Rookie Watch (@NFLRookieWatxh) June 9, 2023
znModeratoriām excited about a lot of these rookie offensive players. nacua, avila, evans, even allen. i know they wonāt all make it, but even if just two of them end up being solid contributors iāll be happy. honestly i can even see three of these guys being contributors. excited for training camp to start.
I think all 4 will make it. The question is which ones will become multi-year starters. It’s clear that Avila will. The other 3 could at a minimum become good role players.
Avila may be the Rams best 2nd round pick since (coincidentally, given his position) Saffold.
znModeratorJalen Ramsey says Aaron Donald is the best defensive player ever https://t.co/Zp6z9jeaN7
— TurfShowTimes (@TurfShowTimes) June 9, 2023
znModeratorThe Rams have had great success with Safeties dating back over a decade. We have good reason to believe that we have a good player on roster to start opposed Jordan Fuller
Russ Yeast is my pick for a breakout defender for the Rams. I think Yeast steps up in year 2 as a starter pic.twitter.com/s7lCGqGHJx
— RAMS ON FILM (@RamsOnFilm) June 9, 2023
June 9, 2023 at 10:22 am in reply to: science! physics, astrophysics, abiogenesis, n other stuff #144341
znModeratorāResearchers At Large Hadron Collider Are Confident To Make Contact With Parallel Universe In Daysā https://t.co/Qr2SYzlXMg
— Brian Roemmele (@BrianRoemmele) June 8, 2023
znModeratorStetson Bennett got a encouraging message and signed jersey from Aaron Rodgers, who he grew up watching https://t.co/AnzjTmUHb9
— Rams Wire (@TheRamsWire) June 8, 2023
znModerator
znModeratorRams OTAs: Puka Nacuaās learning curve, Cooper Kupp returns, DBsā energy and more
By Jourdan Rodrigue
https://theathletic.com/4587189/2023/06/06/rams-practice-puka-nacua-cooper-kupp/
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. ā Itās hard to shake some of the deja vu at Rams OTAs this spring when watching a versatile receiver in a No. 17 jersey run all over the field with the first-team offense.
Rookie fifth-round pick Puka Nacua has stood out in each of the three practices the media has been able to view this spring, because of his significant workload despite his age as well as the plays he has made ā and heās impressing the coaching staff, too.
āItās been really impressive, how quickly he has gotten up to speed,ā said head coach Sean McVay after Tuesdayās practice. āHeās really conscientious.ā
No. 1 receiver Cooper Kupp has not previously been at OTAs, and on Tuesday Ben Skowronek and Van Jefferson did not practice (Jefferson had a rest day and Skowronek had some āsorenessā in his foot, according to McVay). So there has been ample opportunity, and need, for a receiver to step in and take on a larger-than-normal workload. Nacua has done exactly that, and the coaching staff has openly tested him with more responsibility each week.
Yet ⦠anyone who has followed this team in the McVay era knows how tough it is to crack an actual featured role in his offense as a rookie receiver. The last player who did that was Kupp, though other rookie receivers have been contributors since Kuppās standout first season in 2017. So much goes on behind the scenes, too ā film study, weight room, recovery, etc. ā so how can we know when the excitement over a player is simply because theyāre excelling as a fill-in during the spring, or theyāre the real deal?
āI referenced Puka, I think that is one of the things he has done so quickly ā you go from thinking about the lines on the page to the reason we are running the concept,ā Kupp said. āYou go from just what the picture says to what the āwhyā is behind the picture. I think thatās the biggest difference ā when you can get to the āwhy.āā
One example: The Ramsā skill players and quarterbacks worked on red zone concepts on one end of the field, with no defenders and at a slower pace, in the early portion of practice. McVay led this group as they set up different route stacks and formations intended to spring certain players loose. He took extra time to explain to Nacua and others why the spacing on certain routes needed to match a certain timing count in the quarterbackās progression, and clarified what exactly about one specific concept manipulated the limited area at the goal line. Several minutes later in red zone 11-on-11 drills, this time against defenders, Matthew Stafford hit Nacua on the concept he had just worked on for a touchdown.
āHeās pretty special,ā Kupp said. āIf he can stay on a trajectory, heās going to be a very good football player in this league. I love the way he attacks each day. Heās got a great feel for the game, (for) leverage, running routes. ⦠Heās asking the right questions. Thatās the big thing. As he gets more reps, over and over as he gets to see these things, heāll just get better and better.ā
More observations, notes and takeaways from the last day of OTAs access, before the Rams begin minicamp next week:
(Note: Per the Ramsā policy, media with access to practice cannot report formations, personnel groups, deployment of personnel, starting lineups unless confirmed directly by a coach or player, unconventional plays, the number of reps players take at certain positions, etc.)
⢠Tuesday marked Kuppās first full day back at the Ramsā training facilities, after spending a few weeks away while he and Anna, his wife, welcomed their third child. Kupp was not a full participant in the practice and instead worked on the side with athletic trainers. He had the tightrope procedure last winter to fix the high ankle sprain that ended his 2022 season, and between the recovery and his time away, the Rams are cautiously onboarding him back into live action.
āIām feeling really good now,ā Kupp said. āYou donāt know until you really get out here doing football stuff, really putting your ankle through the stuff that is required of playing football. You canāt simulate this stuff. ⦠I feel, right now, as weāve been pushing it pretty hard, I feel really good. Iām itching to be out there. Itās a good place to be, now, where Iām asking for more and wanting to do more and feeling like youāre getting held back versus (them) pushing you to do more.ā
⢠Kupp and Stafford are in the process of outlining a series of practices before training camp because the two are not currently able to get live reps together.
⢠As previously written, the Rams have boosted the size of their offensive line at some positions and theyāre also moving a few players around (especially on the interior). Tuesday, Tremayne Anchrum played left guard while rookie Steve Avila played right guard. McVay confirmed that the Rams are experimenting with Anchrum and Avila at either starting guard spot.
ā(Weāre) figuring out that ābest fiveā combination,ā McVay said, ā(and) thereās still so much football to be played and so many things to be evaluated. But I like the way that both of those guys ā they were playing on the opposite sides last week, they flipped this week. Itās only going to make us that much more versatile.ā
⢠McVay also added that it will be āawesomeā to have 2022 starting left tackle Joe Noteboom back to practicing fully (he is limited as the Rams continue to slowly onboard him following last yearās Achilles injury), but he left Noteboomās specific position up in the air.
⢠Receiver Sam James worked on the side with athletic trainers throughout the practice. New addition Tyler Johnson, a three-year NFL veteran signed by the Rams last week, is immediately working into the rotation (and wearing No. 14, for now).
⢠Inside linebacker Ernest Jones drew a lot of praise throughout practice from coaches and teammates and made two plays on the ball. The first, a pass breakup, showcased mental acumen, because even though practices arenāt currently live-speed, making the play required Jones to match and then jump a short/quick-game route close to the line of scrimmage. The second was contested between offense and defense ā what the defense argued as an incomplete ball thanks to Jonesā coverage in the corner of the end zone, the offense argued as a catch by second-year running back Kyren Williams.
⢠McVay spent a lot of time in the pre-practice stretching period with centers Coleman Shelton and Brian Allen and then carried that conversation over to new offensive line coach Ryan Wendell and assistant coaches Nick Jones and Zak Kromer. Shelton and Allen have been able to simulate the āstartingā language with both the first and second teams, respectively, because they both have starting experience.
⢠The early energy from the secondary carried into a really competitive red zone 11-on-11 period, where the reserve defense made several plays against quarterback Stetson Bennett and the reserve offense. Arizona State rookie cornerback Timarcus Davis broke up a Bennett pass, and then Bennett was intercepted by North Carolina State rookie safety Tanner Ingle. Another safety to potentially keep an eye on through minicamp and training camp: Mississippi State rookie undrafted free agent Collin Duncan, who in jersey No. 33 and measuring in at 6-foot and 210 pounds, brought more āformer Rams playersā deja vu to the day.
⢠Stafford calmly took matters into his own hands for the side of the offense when he and the first team subbed back in. He hit Nacua and tight end Tyler Higbee on back-to-back touchdowns. Right tackle Rob Havenstein ran up to Nacua to celebrate his score, and accidentally knocked over the much-smaller player.
⢠Bennett then got the reserve defense back in the next round: He threaded a pass through three defenders and into the waiting arms of Williams in the end zone.
The throw and catch were so slick that several defensive players celebrated the offensive play. Second-year cornerback Cobie Durant turned to the spectating media and said admiringly, āHey, thatās Stetson Bennett.ā Donte Deayon, a former Rams cornerback who is now a Bill Walsh Coaching Fellow with the team, jotted a note down on his clipboard and side-eyed the media as well, saying, āThatās a play.ā
⢠The quote (and joke) of the day came from Kupp, who noted that Bennett has really shown his athleticism in throwing off-platform or out of structure.
āI think heās definitely the most athletic quarterback from Georgia that weāve got on our team.ā
znModeratorPlayers I was impressed with today, whether it was making plays or clear increase in role:
ā Tremayne Anchrum
ā Puka Nacua
ā Jordan Fuller
ā Tanner Ingle
ā Kyren Williams
ā Ernest Jones
ā Steve Avila— Jourdan Rodrigue (@JourdanRodrigue) June 6, 2023
…
With Rams' Matthew Stafford back in form, Tutu Atwell appears to be catching on https://t.co/6etFoSMgph
— Gary Klein (@LATimesklein) June 1, 2023
With Ramsā Matthew Stafford back in form, Tutu Atwell finally appears to be catching on
BY GARY KLEIN
On a Rams team that features nearly 40 new players, it does not take much to qualify as a seasoned veteran.
Quarterback Matthew Stafford is preparing for his 15th NFL season but many of the players who will be counted on this season are second- and third-year pros.
Observations from an organized-team activity workout on Wednesday.
Stafford can still throw deep: Stafford, who did not throw passes last offseason because of right elbow tendinitis, showed an improved connection with third-year receiver Tutu Atwell.
During a full-squad drill, Stafford dropped back and fired a pass more than 40 yards. Atwell split two defenders and then outmuscled them to make the catch.
Last season, Stafford and the speedy Atwell connected on a couple of deep passes. The first covered 54 yards against the Dallas Cowboys. The second was a 62-yard touchdown against the New Orleans Saints in the game Stafford suffered a season-ending spinal bruise.
On Wednesday, Stafford also made several perfectly placed touchdown passes to tight end Tyler Higbee.

Rams rookie quarterback Stetson Bennett unleashes a pass during organized team activities Wednesday.(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)Rookie quarterback Stetson Bennett completed touchdown passes to new tight end Hunter Long and receiver Lance McCutcheon against reserves.
Rookie safety Jason Taylor II intercepted a pass by Bennett.
Running back Kyren Williams is getting extended look: Williams is sharing reps with starter Cam Akers, who finished last season by rushing for more than 100 yards in three consecutive games.
Williams, a fifth-round draft pick in 2022, was sidelined for most of the offseason workouts as a rookie after he suffered a foot injury that forced him to begin training camp on the physically unable to perform list. Williams then suffered an ankle injury in the season-opening defeat to the Buffalo Bills.
Williams rushed for 139 yards in 35 carries last season.
Rookie receiver Puka Nacua making an impression: The 6-foot-2, 205-pound Nacua is playing all three receiver positions, showing a good grasp on the playbook.
With star receiver Cooper Kupp and Ben Skorwonek absent from on-field workouts, Nacua is positioned to compete for a role during training camp.
Cornerback Cobie Durant breaking up passes: Durant, a second-year pro, is among the teamās most-experienced players in a secondary that includes fourth-year safety Jordan Fuller.
Last season, Durant intercepted three passes, one in a Week 2 victory over the Atlanta Falcons, and two in a Week 15 victory over the Denver Broncos, including one he returned for an 85-yard touchdown.
Durant and Derion Kendrick appear on track to start at cornerback.
Familiar face: Former Arizona Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury attended the workout. Kingsbury had a 28-37-1 record as coach of the Cardinals from 2019 to 2022. He is now a senior offensive analyst at USC.
znModerator
znModeratorRams rookie WR Puka Nacua is standing out in OTAsĀ this spring. WR Cooper Kupp and HC Sean McVay explain why, with Nacua also sharing insight into his work ethic that's made the transition smooth so far: https://t.co/4WH8JRPKy2
— Stu Jackson (@StuJRams) June 8, 2023
znModeratorThe Rams are bringing in another veteran receiver, agreeing to terms with former Chiefs and Ravens WR Demarcus Robinson
Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
Couple things stand out to me about Demarcus Robinson – heās a competitive vet; they donāt have a heck of a lot of veteran WRs fully practicing right now, and a lot of players who need to learn how. And, he has return experience – that entire competition has yet to materialize.Long, long way to go until September. Lots to learn still about several players in that group.
So much of what theyāre doing right now across the whole roster is learning how to practice and apply stuff from film room for the first time. Several vets arenāt practicing. Super helpful to have a consistent player like him around for a while.
…
Robinson, 4th round, 2016
fromĀ https://www.nfl.com/prospects/demarcus-robinson/3200524f-4239-9065-1db8-5ff5da8a3829
HEIGHT6ā 1āāWEIGHT203 lbsARM33āāHAND9 1/2āā.ByĀ Lance ZierleinOverviewImmensely talented with elite combination of straight-Āline speed and quickĀ-twitch athleticism. Robinson flashes gameĀ-breaking potential as a deep ball threat and after the catch, but was suspended by two different coaches over a three-year period. While Robinson is likely to test off the charts and has the talent to be a top four receiver in this draft, it is hard to imagine his draft slot equaling his talent due to his character concerns.Strengths- Talent jumps off the tape early in the session
- Electric vertical talent that can make cornerbacks reĀthink their coverage plans
- Has shake at the line of scrimmage to free himself against press coverage and has adequate ball tracking skills
- Graceful, flexible athlete with instant turbo acceleration
- Has ability to hit the home run after the catch
- Races off the line and forced cornerbacks into retreat opening easy comeback catches
- Has talent and ability to make a living outside or from the slot
Weaknesses- Routes can be lazy at times
- Will need to improve with selling fakes at break point of his routes as a pro
- Too reliant on athleticism and speed over improvement of skill level
- Hands are a concern with 11 drops to 106 catches at Florida
- Plays smaller than his listed size
- Suspended four times while at Florida
- Scouts call him immature and selfish
…

znModeratorš§µ1/2
remembering the great rams defenses of the 70s and 80s, the post white and blue uniform defenses that sent 18 guys to the pro bowl, that finished the season top 5 or better in fewest offensive points allowed 10 different times: pic.twitter.com/JI4QS4JvSW
— roberto clemente (@rclemente2121) June 8, 2023
znModeratorPuka Szn?
Nacua, a fifth-round rookie, has stood out in OTAs and was called "pretty special" by Cooper Kupp https://t.co/opzNwdoZfL
— Cameron DaSilva (@camdasilva) June 7, 2023
znModeratorThe Rams are bringing in another veteran receiver, agreeing to terms with former Chiefs and Ravens WR Demarcus Robinson https://t.co/a7NwEeqjPV
— Cameron DaSilva (@camdasilva) June 8, 2023
znModeratorThe Ramsā specialists are all rookies, which seems like the football equivalent of riding a roller coaster with no crossbar – until you get to know these young dudes, their work behind the scenes, and their unique, high-octane coaches: https://t.co/y96XSSyure
— Jourdan Rodrigue (@JourdanRodrigue) June 8, 2023
znModerator9 things we learned from Rams’ draft-focused episode of ‘Behind The Grind’
Cameron DaSilva
9 things we learned from Rams’ draft-focused episode of ‘Behind The Grind’
The Los Angeles Rams released Episode 2 of their āHard Knocksā-style web series called āBehind The Grindā, with this episode focusing primarily on the 2023 NFL draft. It gives fans a behind-the-scenes look at everything that goes on in the days leading up to the draft, as well as the process during the three days of selecting players.
Cameras were all over the Ramsā draft house to capture the conversations of Sean McVay, Les Snead and others, which revealed exactly what the team was thinking throughout the draft. In this episode, we learned just how far up the Rams wanted to trade in the first round, how high they were on Kobie Turner and got a good look at the collaborative process with Snead, McVay and those involved in the selection process.
Here are nine things we learned from Episode 2 of the teamās fantastic show.
1
Ramsā draft room is incredibly open and collaborative
The Rams donāt just draft based on the opinions of McVay and Snead. They have position coaches, personnel evaluators and scouting analysts in the building when picks are made, weighing the opinions of many before making a selection.Obviously, Snead is the primary decision-maker, but he takes into account how his coaches and talent evaluators feel about a player. McVay is always willing to trust Sneadās gut and primary instinct, deferring to him because of all the work he puts in leading up to the draft.
Itās truly fun to watch Snead and McVay work in tandem while the draft is going on.
2
Kevin Demoff is more excited about 2023 team than last yearās group
There was a lot of hype about the Rams in 2022 coming off their Super Bowl win. They were one of the favorites to win it all again, only to come up way short with a 5-12 record, largely due to injuries.Yet, even with as much pre-season excitement as there was about the Rams potentially running it back,ā COO Kevin Demoff is more excited about this yearās team.
āI am so excited for what this team can become,ā he said. āI think some of you have heard me say this and itāll sound crazy, but I promise you itās not. I am more excited about this team going into 2023 at this point in the year than I was for last yearās team going into 2022.ā
3
Rams looked as high as No. 16 to trade up
Though the Rams didnāt have a first-round pick, they didnāt just sit on their hands and enjoy the show. They were proactive in trying to move up. It was reported recently that they targeted five different offensive players in the first round and in this āBehind The Grindā episode, we found out just how high the Rams were looking.McVay asked Snead at what point a trade up makes sense, and Snead replied by asking whether the Rams should call Washington at No. 16 overall.
āWhat do you really think begins to make sense?ā McVay said.
āI wonder if you call Washington,ā Snead replied.
4Rams didnāt want to trade 2nd-round pick in 2024 to move up
Snead was on the phone with a member of another team, presumably a GM, talking about a potential trade into the first round. We donāt know who he was talking to, but the other team wanted the Ramsā second-round pick in a potential trade up, which Snead wasnāt interested in doing.āWe wouldnāt do the next yearās two,ā Snead said. āI donāt mind talking about next year but this yearās picks would be better.ā
5McVay was talking to Kevin OāConnell about trading up to No. 23
At one point in the first round, McVay was pondering a trade up. He asked a couple of members of the Ramsā personnel group whether it would make sense to trade up to No. 23, citing Vikings coach Kevin OāConnellās interest in moving down after talking to him throughout the night.āIāve been talking with OāConnell. I think theyāre trying to get out. Would that still make the most sense for us?ā Snead asked.
The Vikings didnāt end up trading down, standing pat and selecting Jordan Addison.
6
Les Snead loves Steve Avilaās run blocking
When the Rams were on the clock at No. 36, they were working through their options. Avila was one of their top targets and when discussing his game, Snead was fired up about his run-blocking ability.āThis guyās a clinic in the run game. I know he can play the run. I know he can run block,ā Snead said confidently.
The Rams felt he was the best offensive lineman on the board and ultimately the best player for them, excitedly selecting the TCU product in the second round.
7
Rams were looking for players to complement Aaron Donald
In the third round, the Rams were weighing their options in terms of positions to target. Itās clear they were eyeing defensive players and McVay mentioned the importance of finding guys who complement Donald up front.He felt taking an edge rusher would be best, which is why the Rams selecting Tennesseeās Byron Young.
āWhether itās edge or interior, itās like, who complements AD and is also better for us long-term? I think addressing the rusher, whoever you guys think is the best, is the smart thing. Go with your gut.ā
8
Snead, Raheem Morris and Eric Henderson all loved Kobie Turner at No. 89
The Ramsā second pick in the third round made for an interesting discussion. Snead was high on Turner at No. 89, but he wondered if they should take him that early.He wasnāt the only one who loved Turnerās game. Defensive line coach Eric Henderson was also in the room, as was Morris, and both were big fans of Turner. Henderson and Morrisā opinions helped confirm Sneadās gut feeling that the Rams should select Turner.
āMy favorite football player is Wake Forest. I just donāt know if this is where we pick him,ā Snead said.
āLes, the one thing I appreciate is the conviction on something. If all these guys go, who you gonna be the most pissed about?ā McVay asked
āOh, that dude right there,ā Snead said, referring to Turner.
āIf you feel strongly about it, Iām (expletive) with you 100%,ā McVay replied.
McVay then asked if there was a better defensive player on the board for the Rams at that point.
āNot based on what we are going to use him for,ā Morris said.
āMy thing is weāre gonna be (expletive) furious if we lose this (expletive) guy,ā McVay said.
9
Stetson Bennett kept jumping out to Snead when watching defenders against Georgia
In the fourth round, the Rams selected Bennett ā a player Snead loved throughout the draft process. At one point, Demoff even said to Snead that heād been on Bennett āfor months.āWhat turned Snead onto Bennett was the way he jumped out when Snead was watching SEC defenders against Georgia. He kept noticing Bennettās game, viewing him as more of a weapon than a game-manager for the Bulldogs.
āI would always watch SEC defenders against Georgiaās OL because they got a good OL and itās like, damn, this Stetson Bennett. Everybody said he was the damn walk-on. This guyās actually a weapon,ā Snead said.
znModerator
znModeratorDan Campbell says Jared Goff is better now than he was with the Rams
from https://theramswire.usatoday.com/2023/06/07/rams-sean-mcvay-jared-goff-lions-improve-detroit/
Goff agreed with Campbellās statement, and Sean McVay essentially did, too. Reporters asked McVay about Campbellās comments Tuesday and asked whether he feels the same way about Goffās improvement.
āI think Jaredās played at a really high level. Iāll tell you what, though, when you watch what he did last year, he played great,ā McVay said. āAnd I think because heās so conscientious, repetition is the mother of learning. The more you play, the more you learn. You can really see heās able to get through progressions quickly. They were asking a lot of him. He got a lot of different guys involved, took great care of the football, and so I think heās only gotten better. He played really good football here for us, really grateful for those things. But I was really impressed with just the way that he led and the way that he ended up demonstrating a lot of the things that we want to embody, that mental toughness. I think he was like 29-7 in terms of touchdowns, interceptions, one of the better ratios, and threw for a bunch of yards and they were one of the top offenses. I was really happy to see how well he did. I think thatās probably a fair assessment because heās only getting better.ā
June 7, 2023 at 7:10 am in reply to: the 2023 OL thread (w/ definitive article posted on 5/30) #144321
znModeratorBrian Allen was ranked as the 12th-best center in the NFL, which is a bit higher than expected https://t.co/Xm8y7yCnbk
— Rams Wire (@TheRamsWire) June 6, 2023
-
AuthorPosts

