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Rams Reacts, Week 2

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Fan confidence dipped slightly from Week 1 to Week 2, despite the L.A. Rams beating the Houston Texans. That drop was only minor, from 95% to 94%, but the fact that it did not go up after starting 1-0 could be an indication that Rams fans want to see a better performance by the team as a whole before buying that L.A. could be the best team in the NFC.

That being said, 94% of Rams fans responded to this week’s reacts poll by saying that they are confident in the direction of the team. That’s a strong statement for L.A. as they head into their Week 2 matchup against the Tennessee Titans and look to improve to 2-0.

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One thing that could definitely help the confidence score go up in Week 3 would be a standout performance by the offensive line. Because there have been so many injuries to the OL this week, a showing of health, strength, and depth would build confidence in the fanbase that the Rams offense is going to be okay moving forward.

The Titans are not the best team on L.A.’s schedule, so it may only be cautious optimism again if the Rams win.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-news/126214/rams-reacts-week-2
 
Rams injury report: How worried are you?

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The Los Angeles Rams had a trio of offensive linemen on the injury report this week but it appears that only one of them will miss Sunday’s game against the Tennessee Titans. How worried are you about the Rams protecting Matthew Stafford without Steve Avila this weekend?

On a scale of 1-5, how major is an Avila injury in the grand scheme of things?

Avila is listed as doubtful, which all but assures that he will be out of the lineup. The Rams played Beaux Limmer last week against the Houston Texans after Avila left the game with an ankle injury. The only other player listed as doubtful is tight end Colby Parkinson, a player who few fans seem to be worried about missing right now.

Here’s the final injury report of the week for Rams at Titans: pic.twitter.com/JuvkeZSEhj

— Sarah Barshop (@sarahbarshop) September 12, 2025

But Parkinson’s injury has other consequences, which is probably a positive one: Rookie Terrance Ferguson could get more playing time in Week 2 than he did in Week 1.

The Rams will have Kevin Dotson and Rob Havenstein, so as expected the final injury report wasn’t nearly as bad as the one a couple of days ago.

Scale 1-5, how significant is the loss of Steve Avila for one week?

Let us know in the comments

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-injuries/126284/rams-injury-report-steve-avila
 
Get Angry: What do you want to get off of your chest?

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It’s time for you to motivate the Los Angeles Rams. It can be venting your frustrations with a certain player, like Colby Parkinson, or a coach, like Sean McVay. It can be trying to hype up Matthew Stafford, who has never beat the Tennessee Titans in his entire career. It can be Les Snead, asking him why he didn’t work harder to keep Willie Lampkin. It can be asking Steve Avila, “Could you have gutted this one out against Jeffery Simmons?”

What do you want to get off of your chest before the Rams face the Titans on Sunday?​


I’ll post some prompts in the comments section, or you can create your own, and you use this opportunity on a Saturday to speak your truth about the Rams before they play the Titans on Sunday.

Matthew Stafford: 0-4 vs. Titans​


Does anyone want to help Stafford get his mentals straight before trying to break a winless career record against Tennessee?

stafford has never beaten the titans, he's 0-4 against them, despite being a favored in 3 of the 4 games.

the last time was in 2021, a 16-28 loss, the rams were 7.5 home favorites, a game in which he took a beating – but after the loss stafford went on a 9-3 run a won the sb! pic.twitter.com/RqRdwzt1S0

— roberto clemente (@rclemente2121) September 11, 2025

Stafford’s four career games against the Titans:

  • 2012, Lions lose 44-41 in OT
  • 2016, Lions lose 16-15
  • 2020, Lions lose 46-25
  • 2021, Rams lose 28-16

Remarkably, the Rams even lost to the Titans during Stafford’s Super Bowl season. (To be fair, that team was 12-5, something that seems very easy to have forgotten by now.)

Tennessee was terrible last year, Brian Callahan’s first as the head coach. I’ve seen some Titans fans claiming that Callahan doesn’t know how to coach after watching him call Week 1’s loss to the Broncos. Tennessee’s defense wasn’t as much of a problem as its offense however and the Titans actually played the pass quite well, intercepting Bo Nix twice. Do you think Stafford needs some extra motivation to beat the Titans for the first time in his career, or are we overselling a team that went 3-14 last year?

Colby Parkinson: The beat goes on​


The $22.5 million tight end is doubtful to play this week anyway, but the story continues for last year’s biggest free agent bust by L.A.. Parkinson had two catches for -6 yards and a fumble in Week 1, literally taking a step backwards from his abysmal 2024 season.

Are you more mad at Parkinson for failing to meet expectations, Les Snead for signing Parkinson, or Sean McVay for continuing to play Parkinson last week?

Sean McVay: Will we see more Ferguson, Jarquez Hunter, Blake Corum?​


Do you want to vent some frustrations with McVay’s personnel usage in Week 1?

McVay said Colby Parkinson's possible absence "could" open up more opportunities for rookie TE Terrance Ferguson on Sunday.

McVay on his show this week said based on the type of game Week 1 could be, felt like special teams was best approach last week.

"I thought he did a… https://t.co/rfpQmzUOlO

— Stu Jackson (@StuJRams) September 12, 2025

McVay gave Kyren Williams 82% of the snaps, compared to only 17% for Corum and 0% for Hunter because he was inactive. Instead, Cody Schrader was active and now Schrader is on the Jaguars.

McVay gave 58% of the tight end snaps to Tyler Higbee, compared to 48% for Parkinson, 37% for Davis Allen, and 0% for Ferguson.

What do you want to tell McVay about using his bench going into this week against the Titans? Make sure you’re scrolling down to the comments to share your opinions and find out what other fans are saying!

With Cody Schrader going to the Jags, my guess is that the Rams shift to Ronnie Rivers getting elevated from the PS on gamedays.

Do think we see Jarquez Hunter more in the second half of the season…but Rivers offers more on STs like Schrader.

— Blaine Grisak 💭 (@bgrisakTST) September 9, 2025

At wide receiver, McVay had Davante Adams out there for 90% of the snaps, while Puka Nacua had 63% (and missed time with injury), Jordan Whittington had 50%, Tutu Atwell had 42%, Konata Mumpfield had 10%, and Xavier Smith only played two snaps but gained more yards than Tutu and Whittington.

Any other thoughts you want to share with McVay about the gameplan vs. Tennessee?

JeffinBranson shared these thoughts on the comments the other day:

The Titans beat the Rams the last time they played, by sending their pass rush right up the middle. Coleman Shelton et all couldn’t handle it at all. Hopefully McVay has a game plan to counter this. Roll-outs and reverses and jet sweeps and screens are some of the things that negate that tactic. I am not as confident as you guys, but I hope I’m dead wrong and that we trample them. I want to see n offensive explosion, like against Buffalo last year. I hope we put up 40 points.

The Rams are much bigger upfront now, but that doesn’t change the fact that Jeffery Simmons is a menace. He had at least 5 pressures in Week 1 and Denver’s interior offensive line is no slouch.

Troy Reeder: Go off, fam​


I just feel like some of you want to go off on Troy Reeder because he’s here, so by all means go for it again.

Tutu Atwell: $10 million for this?​


Maybe it’s not Atwell you’re mad at. Maybe it’s Snead and McVay. The Rams paid Atwell $10 million guaranteed to not leave in free agency and then Stafford targeted him one time, for four yards.

This could not have possibly ever been the idea when the Rams paid Tutu $10 million.

Did you realize that a $10 million salary cap hit is the 18th highest in the entire NFL in 2025?

Sean McVay aims to roll out a more blended Davante Adams-Puka Nacua attack https://t.co/0OdsETEJ5b

— Gary Klein (@LATimesklein) September 12, 2025

Tutu’s cap hit is only $1 million less than DK Metcalf, it’s more than Brandon Aiyuk, Cooper Kupp, Stefon Diggs, Nico Collins, Jaylen Waddle, Jerry Jeudy, DeVonta Smith, and Keenan Allen. How was this possibly the plan? One target, one catch, four yards.

Who are you mad with for the Tutu Atwell contract, if anyone?

Darious Williams: Tutu of defense​


On defense, Williams has the 16th-biggest cap hit for a cornerback in 2025 but he’s on the bench. It could be a short period of time before the Rams decide to part ways with Williams, but they could just be waiting to make sure that they definitely won’t need him at some point. Injuries happen at cornerback too.

It was kind of questionable to bring back Williams last year. He was cut by the Jaguars, he’s 32, and now he’s unsurprisingly not good enough to be active. Was this a necessary evil for Les Snead or should the Rams have avoided the Darious Williams reunion?

Now go to the comments! Vent!

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-roster/126297/rams-titans-preview-stafford-mcvay-tutu
 
Sean McVay: I was really pleased with Blake

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If you watched the Los Angeles Rams defeat the Tennessee Titans, then you likely saw Blake Corum outperforming newly extended Kyren Williams, though to be fair, Williams was still the primary back, and he ran hard to close out the game, but when the game was still within Tennessee’s grasp, the Rams used Corum as a change of pace, and it worked.

Williams ended up with 17 carries for 66 yards while Corum notched one touchdown and 44 yards on five carries. Would Sean McVay consider flipping their workload as the head coach in his post-game pressed acknowledged that Corum is an “explosive” player?

The head coach did compliment Corum immensely, but he didn’t anoint Corum as the starter going forward, instead choosing to say that the Rams have two running backs, and that getting them both involved was their plan for this contest. Though the coach did say he’d like to see more of that going forward, leaving the door open for Corum to get more work over the course of the season.

Said McVay:

“He was awesome. That was much more aligned, I mean, I thought Ron (Gould) did a great job, but we got two backs we feel really good about and a guy in Jarquez Hunter that’s only gonna get better, and so, and then, you know, you talk about a lot of good individual efforts by our rookies by some younger players, I was really pleased with Blake, thought the little gap run that he had on the second down and 10 where he got through the backside A-gap, you know, looked like he was gonna come out clean. He’s explosive…he’s a good football player, I have a lot of trust in hin, and then…we’ll continue to see that moving forward, so I thought that was good today…”

Fans of the team may want to see more work from Corum, but it’s up to McVay and his staff to pull the trigger on that. We’ve seen McVay make comments about wanting to get players involved, such as Tutu Atwell, but just because McVay says he wants to get a player more looks, doesn’t mean it will happen.

However, Atwell is in a different position because the Rams have Puka Nacua and Davante Adams, and it’s not likely fans will complain about seeing those players get the majority of the touches.

Whether it’s fair or not, it’s different with Williams because as good as Williams is, other running backs around the league would be an upgrade, and if the Rams do have an upgrade in Corum, then why wouldn’t the Rams go with the best player?

In a week-to-week league, the running back situation in L.A. is all the sudden worth monitoring, whether McVay wants to come out and say that or not.


Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-roster/126370/rams-sean-mcvay-blake-corum-williams
 
Random Ramsdom: 2 weeks in, who looks best in the NFC West?

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The Los Angeles Rams, the San Francisco 49ers and the Arizona Cardinals are starting their season 2-0. The Seattle Seahawks are in last as of now, but did manage a nice win the Pittsburgh Steelers to bring their record up to 1-1.

It’s been a strong start overall for the NFC West as the Rams have looked solid, the Cardinals are finding ways to win, the 49ers are navigating a boatload of injuries, and Seattle may get better as Sam Darnold settles into his new gig. It doesn’t appear that the divsion winner, whoever it ends up being, will have it easy as this divsion seems competetive, and hungry to prove their competetive across the NFL.

Who do you think is the best in the West?

Thank you to everyone who commented on the game threads yesterday and the final score post too and thank you for commenting in general, we are so lucky to have YOU!

Speaking of commenting, comment on whatever you want, enjoy your start to the week and thanks for checking out Turf Show Times!

Rams CB Ahkello Witherspoon breaks clavicle in win over Titans (sports.yahoo)​


“Rams insider for The Athletic Nate Atkins revealed the diagnosis of the cornerback’s injury.

“Rams CB Ahkello Witherspoon broke his clavicle. Rough news for the team’s top outside option,” Atkins shared.

He adds what this now means for one notable Rams veteran.

“Darious Williams has a role again to fill in here,” Atkins said.

Witherspoon left the game with one tackle, which was a solo stop. He delivered two solo tackles against the Houston Texans in the season opener. He’s played for the Rams since 2023 — collecting four interceptions total in L.A.“

Like this 🤞fr pic.twitter.com/XxAcYwlnjd

— Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) September 14, 2025

Matthew Stafford throws 2 TDs as Rams spoil home opener for Titans and Cam Ward (apnews.com)​


“Matthew Stafford threw for 298 yards and two touchdowns and the Rams beat the Tennessee Titans 33-19.

“When we execute with the players that we have and the scheme that we have, we got a … a high probability of being successful,” Stafford said.

Wide receiver Puka Nacua also ran 45 yards for a touchdown and had 91 yards receiving. Davante Adams had 106 yards receiving and a touchdown catch. Joshua Karty also kicked two field goals.“

Tae's top plays, all in one place. 🤲

More highlights on https://t.co/m9oFPQ0GVI 🎥 pic.twitter.com/fAvirB4Ezm

— Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) September 14, 2025

2025 NFL season, Week 2: What We Learned from Sunday’s games (nfl.com)​


“Stafford bounced back from bad pick as Rams dominated second half. Tennessee took a 13-10 lead into halftime as the Rams left points on the board. Matthew Stafford’s bad interception in the closing minute of the first half allowed the Titans to gain the edge, and the Rams were lucky that a Titans punt return for touchdown was called back by a penalty. But they countered with a dominant second half, scoring on four of their first five possessions before running the clock out. Stafford completed 14 of 17 passes for 191 yards and two touchdown strikes in the second half, hitting Davante Adams to make it a two-score game late. The Rams also ran the ball effectively, even without Steve Avila on the offensive line, getting Blake Corum more touches and controlling the line of scrimmage the longer the game went on. The red-zone execution (3 for 6) needs work, but the overall product still looked strong.“

Your favorite duo’s favorite duo. pic.twitter.com/zwzpWr2F7D

— Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) September 14, 2025

Comment of the day:​


Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-news/126389/rams-news-nfc-west-nfl-division
 
Age Bait: It wasn’t the old QB after all

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When it comes to Matthew Stafford’s health, nobody wants to count their chicks before they hatch. The 37-year-old quarterback has only made it through 11.7% of the regular season so far and there is a lot of football left to play in 2025; more if the L.A. Rams make the playoffs.

That being said, here we are two weeks into the season and it is anything but the “old QBs” who are feeling the weight of surviving the most physical team sport in the country:

J.J. McCarthy, high ankle sprain (2-4 weeks), 22 years old

Here's Kevin O'Connell's full answer when asked if any part of today's J.J. McCarthy news — he's out 2-4 weeks because of an ankle injury — is based on performance. In other words: Was this a soft benching? pic.twitter.com/3qalNwVbTL

— Kevin Seifert (@SeifertESPN) September 15, 2025

Joe Burrow, turf toe (3+ months), 28 years old

Bengals QB Joe Burrow feared to have suffered a Grade 3 turf toe injury that will require surgery and sideline him at least three months. (via @Rapsheet, @TomPelissero) pic.twitter.com/lxVnTj235H

— NFL (@NFL) September 15, 2025

Justin Fields, concussion (???), 26 years old

Justin Fields #jets

Injured on this play. Have not heard what is being evaluated but his Head slams into the ground. pic.twitter.com/oaV8mYOSA7

— Tom Christ, PT, DPT, OCS, FAAOMPT (@FantasyInjuryT) September 14, 2025

Brock Purdy, shoulder (2-4 weeks), 25 years old

#BrockPurdy @49ers
Likely shoulder injury here
3rd down early 2nd Q
Left mild AC joint sprain
Played thru
(Investigating toe now
Anyone got video?)
Will discuss #HalftimeInjuryChat #MINvsCHI pic.twitter.com/xbFvmR59pT

— David J. Chao – ProFootballDoc (@ProFootballDoc) September 9, 2025

Jayden Daniels, knee (???), 24 years old

Commanders QB Jayden Daniels has a knee injury that has his status for Sunday’s game vs. the Raiders in question, per league sources. The injury is not believed to be serious, but it remains uncertain whether Daniels will be able to play Sunday. pic.twitter.com/KlHNoyfQK6

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) September 15, 2025

After weeks of uncertainty around Stafford in training camp because he’s a 37-year-old with a bad back, so far the only question about the Rams quarterback through two games is whether or not he’s forcing too many passes to one or two receivers.

The results have still be pretty good:​

  • Rams are 2-0
  • Over 100 passer rating in both games
  • 71% completions, 1 INT, 8.8 Y/A
  • 107.1 passer rating

Stafford ends Week 2 ranked seventh in passer rating, eighth in completion percentage, fifth in success rate, and sixth in first down throws. So far, we have seen no visible signs of Stafford being 37 or having a back injury.

Rams QB Matthew Stafford remains one of the best QBs out of play action this season.

Against the Titans, Stafford was 12-of-17 for 166 yards and a touchdown, including seven for 10+ air yards.

Stafford's 133.6 passer rating in play action ranks 3rd in the NFL this season. pic.twitter.com/Jz790V8i4u

— Blaine Grisak 💭 (@bgrisakTST) September 15, 2025

And notably, the NFL’s old guard of quarterbacks has thus far outlasted some of their junior counterparts:

  • Joe Flacco, 40 (most passes in the NFL—because he plays for the Browns)
  • Aaron Rodgers, 42 (5 TDs, although he doesn’t quite look that good for the Steelers)
  • Russell Wilson, 37 (career-high 450 passing yards in Week 2, current NFL passing yard leader)
  • Geno Smith, 35 (We’ll see what happens on MNF, but had 362 yards, 10.6 Y/A in Week 1)
  • Dak Prescott, 32 (NFL-high 59 completions)
  • Jared Goff, 31 (NFL-best 80.6% completions and 6 TDs)

How about that?

Between these six quarterbacks and Stafford, that’s seven over-30 passers who are off to reasonably good and healthy starts to open the 2025 season. Again, this does NOTHING to guarantee that all or any of them will play all 17 games or not even face the bench at some point (looking at you Flacco, Rodgers).

But the fear of having to start a 37-year-old with a back problem because of injury/age concerns isn’t holding up that well against the reality that whether you’re almost 40 or barely 20 (McCarthy), you play football…And that means you’re always at risk of an injury or being outplayed.

Rams are 2-0.

In a way, on his own, so is Matthew Stafford.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...6484/matthew-stafford-age-injury-quarterbacks
 
Who has impressed you the most so far?

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Puka Nacua entered the 2025 season as one of the most productive receivers in the NFL over the past two years, but the Rams have only increased his role, and therefore his stats, in the first two games of the season. Has Puka Nacua gained even more of your respect than he already had?

Nacua leads the NFL with 18 catches through two weeks, but even more spectacularly he also has a success rate of 80%! That’s not just the highest in the NFL, it’s almost 10% higher than Amon-Ra St. Brown’s rate of 70.6% and few players do it better than him.

Matt Harmon highlighted that Nacua is almost on a tier of his own through two weeks: 40% targets per route and over 4 yards per target. Only Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Zay Flowers are anywhere near Puka:

We already knew Puka Nacua was the man but fellow Year 3 WRs Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Zay Flowers join him in the feakshow per route performers in the top right corner through two tweeks.

Doesn't feel like there's been enough discussion on Flowers, in particular, taking what… pic.twitter.com/aw30qoOorI

— Matt Harmon (@MattHarmon_BYB) September 16, 2025

Nacua’s 221 receiving yards ranks fourth in the NFL and he has caught an insane 18 of 20 targets from Matthew Stafford so far. He’s averaging 11.1 yards per target and 9 catches per game.

Insane.

This is all aside from Puka’s 45-yard touchdown run:

There's simply no reason for Puka Nacua to score here. Nevertheless he persisted pic.twitter.com/LQ9qWV3hiK

— JetPack Galileo (@JetPackGalileo) September 16, 2025

Few players in history have been as productive as Nacua through his first 30 games:

Most 90+ receiving yard games in a players first 30 games:

Odell Beckham Jr. – 18
PUKA NACUA – 16
Randy Moss – 13
Victor Cruz – 13
JuJu Smith-Schuster – 13 pic.twitter.com/UBKxu0m7SG

— Underdog NFL (@UnderdogNFL) September 15, 2025

To be honest though, I’ve gotten a lot of pushback in the past when I’ve said that Nacua is a top-3 receiver in the NFL. I’ve tried to put him on the same tier as Ja’Marr Chase but very few people want to believe that because Chase was a top-5 pick and Nacua was a fifth round pick. Chase is the prototypical number one “Hall of Fame caliber” receiver athlete and he’s been amazing with the Bengals in his career. There’s no doubt about that. If you built a WR in a lab, he would be Chase.

However, elite players are not built in labs. They’re unique, they come in different shapes, sizes, and abilities. The best players in history are often going against the grain, including the undersized Aaron Donald and the undraftable Kurt Warner. You can’t say that Nacua doesn’t belong in the conversation just because he was a fifth round pick and doesn’t have the same athletic gifts as Chase.

He has different gifts and Nacua has been as good as any receiver in the NFL since 2023. Others are starting to take notice:

The highest-graded WR since the start of last season:

Puka Nacua – 93.0 🐏 pic.twitter.com/yDBnGuUtgp

— PFF (@PFF) September 12, 2025

So as strange as it is to think that Nacua is the player who you’ve gained the most respect for this year by being so good in two games, I do think that there were still a lot of non-believers out there. Were you one of them and has anything changed in the first two games of the season?

If Nacua is not the Rams player who impressed you the most in the first two games, or gained the most respect, who is? Who has been better than you thought he’d be?

Let us know in the comments your vote for the Rams player who is better than you thought he’d be.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-roster/126560/rams-puka-nacua-stats-nfl-records
 
Why did Rams re-sign Tutu Atwell?

Rams WR Tutu Atwell


The Los Angeles Rams only re-signed a handful of players this past offseason who would have otherwise hit free agency. It wasn’t a surprise when the Rams signed left tackle Alaric Jackson to a long-term deal or opted to bring back Jimmy Garoppolo and Ahkello Witherspoon. The move that was surprising was bringing back wide receiver Tutu Atwell.

Atwell, a former second-round pick, had never fully lived up to his draft status. That wasn’t necessarily completely the fault of the player. However, the Rams have never consistently made Atwell a featured part of the offense. When Atwell has gotten opportunities, he’s done well. He simply hasn’t consistently gotten opportunities.

This is why it seemed odd that the Rams re-signed Atwell to a one-year, $10 million contract that was fully guaranteed. Nobody would have faulted the Rams had they decided to move on from Atwell and gone their separate ways. Bringing him back seemed to imply that he would be used more. Said head coach Sean McVay in April,

“I think the fans are accurate in that I haven’t done a good enough job of utilizing him…I think when you look at his body of work, when he’s been able to play…there was a lot of production. And if you project that over the course of 17 games, you just watch what he was able to do…I thought he really improved his route detail for a smaller guy. He’s got a good catch radius, he catches the ball outside of his frame really well. He’s an explosive player that people know about. He creates separation…When you look at the times when he’s been able to play, whether that be because some people were out or not, he has produced and he’s delivered, and we’re looking forward to seeing more of that ascension. He’s going to be on the field a lot more, particularly in a lot of those three-receiver sets where, when he’s been on the field, he’s done a really good job.”

Through two weeks of the NFL season, that simply hasn’t been the case. Atwell has one reception for four yards and has been targeted twice. With the Rams running more 12 personnel, they aren’t playing in as many three wide receiver sets which have limited Atwell’s playing time. He’s played 42.1 percent of the team’s offensive snaps this season. That’s 20 percent less than he played in 2023 and close to his 39 percent last season.

What’s also odd is that Atwell is getting less playing time than Jordan Whittington who has played 57 percent of the team’s offensive snaps this season. That’s not a knock on Whittington by any means. However, why bring back Atwell for $10 million if he is essentially the WR4 in the offense? It is worth noting that Atwell has run more routes than Whittington who seems to get used more as a blocker.

Through two weeks, Atwell has been used more of a ‘clear’ player in route concepts in order to create space for other players. Another aspect of this is how quickly Stafford is getting rid of the ball this season. Over the past two seasons, Atwell has been an effective deep target. However, in order for those plays to develop, the quarterback needs time.

Lot of questions about Tutu Atwell's usage this season.

First play – Used as more of a 'clear' player in the route concept. Creates space for Adams.

Second play – Hard to tell if this is a coverage bust b/c Stafford is quick to throw…but Atwell gets behind the defense. pic.twitter.com/3a2JUUyZZh

— Blaine Grisak 💭 (@bgrisakTST) September 17, 2025

The Rams currently rank just 23rd in pass-block win-rate via ESPN and PFF has the offensive line ranked 30th in pass-blocking. To account for that, Stafford is getting the ball out in 2.45 seconds which is the fastest in the NFL. That’s almost a full tenth of a second faster than Sam Darnold who is the next closest at 2.54 seconds. It would also be the fastest of Stafford’s career. The Rams quarterback has never been below 2.5 seconds and has averaged 2.59 seconds in his career.

That doesn’t excuse Atwell’s lack of usage, but also adds some context given what he excels at requires pass protection. It’s hard to imagine that the Rams brought back Atwell on a $10 million fully guaranteed deal to clear out routes for other players. The Rams could use Xavier Smith or Konata Mumpfield in that role.

We’ll see if Atwell gets more involved going forward. However, at the moment, the concerns about bringing Atwell back in the offseason have been validated. At this point it’s fair to question that move. If the Rams can’t find ways to maximize his speed and playmaking ability, it’s hard to justify the decision to re-sign him.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...74/rams-wide-receiver-depth-chart-tutu-atwell
 
2 Rams don’t practice Wednesday: Who is more important?

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The Los Angeles Rams could be without starting left guard Steve Avila for the second week in a row, but this time defensive end Braden Fiske might also miss a game due to injury. Avila and Fiske both didn’t practice on Wednesday, four days before the Rams play a huge Week 3 contest against the Philadelphia Eagles and the roster that had the best trenches on both sides of the ball last season.

If ever there was a time to be fully-loaded at offensive and defensive line, playing against the Eagles is it.

Steve Avila and Braden Fiske will not practice today, Sean McVay said.

— Sarah Barshop (@sarahbarshop) September 17, 2025

Avila missed Week 2 and was replaced in the lineup by Justin Dedich, same as when Avila left the middle of Week 1’s win over the Houston Texans. Braden Fiske was injured in pre-game warmups last Sunday. He played in the game but was limited to 13 snaps.

On the other side of the field, the Eagles had Jalen Carter return to practice on Wednesday and it looks like they’re spittin’ for him to start on Sunday. The Eagles also expect tight end Dallas Goedert to return after missing Week 2.

Which Rams player has a more important role against the Eagles in Week 3? Steve Avila against the Eagles defensive line or Fiske against Philly’s offensive line? Who has better depth to take care of their absence? Let us know what you think in the comments.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...3/rams-injury-report-braden-fiske-steve-avila
 
NFL Week 3 picks: Rams soar to 3-0, Chiefs still winless?

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It took an extra week to get momentum going with my weekly picks but week 2 got me back on the map and headed in the right trajectory. Week 3 will feature six more divisional matchups, giving us a strong indicator of who is the real deal within their division as we take one step closer to the quarter season mark.

Week 2 record: 13-3 Cumulative Record: 22-10

Without further ado…

Week 3 Matchups

(Thursday) Miami Dolphins @ Buffalo Bills, 8:15 PM EST

Mike McDaniel’s postgame conference was … “something”. McDaniel is an intelligent offensive mind, he’s just not head coaching material. The Dolphins will move on here soon. I expect McDaniel will land an OC job in San Francisco, Houston, or wherever Shanahan has ties.

This game should be a blowout. Anything less than that should be of concern to Sean McDermott.

Pick: Bills win 34-13

Cincinnati Bengals @ Minnesota Vikings, 1:00 PM EST

Within just three weeks, we already have a battle of backup quarterbacks. Cincinnati lost Joe Burrow to a grade 3 toe injury and will miss the next three months. Meanwhile, JJ McCarthy will be out for about 2-4 weeks. However, this will actually be an interesting matchup of backup quarterbacks. Jake Browning and Carson Wentz are two very reliable backups in the NFL with career winning records. Browning is 4-3, while Wentz is 47-46-1. In this case, I’m gonna lean towards the home team. I imagine Brian Flores will dial up pressure to make Browning uncomfortable on the road.

CARSON WENTZ CARRYING THE RAMS pic.twitter.com/VRqpIIjNix

— JPA (@jasrifootball) January 7, 2024

Pick: Vikings win 23-13

Pittsburgh Steelers @ New England Patriots, 1:00 PM EST

Tua was able to show signs of life against the New England Patriots defense last week. Despite his age, Aaron Rodgers is better than Tua. I expect a bounce back performance for Pittsburgh and their defense to get on track under Mike Tomlin.

Pick: Steelers win 26-21

Indianapolis Colts @ Tennessee Titans, 1:00 PM EST

The Colts have been the NFL’s biggest surprise through two weeks. Daniel Jones was a castoff but has revitalized his career with Shane Steichen. Their Week 2 win was no slouch either. Jones threw for 316 yards and one touchdown against one the best secondaries in the league. Jonathan Taylor is looking like a top 5 running back again. Look out.

Matt Goncalves legit had Quenton Nelson level eyes on Sunday. He exceeded my expectations in a big way, and I was probably one of his bigger fans among Colts' fans/media pic.twitter.com/r9a9KBbioj

— Zach Hicks (@ZachHicks2) September 8, 2025

Cam Ward actually looks okay as a rookie quarterback. He just doesn’t have enough help, especially at right tackle.

Pick: Colts win 28-14

Houston Texans @ Jacksonville Jaguars, 1:00 PM EST

Not many expected Houston to enter Week 3 with an 0-2 record. The Jaguars look strong under Liam Coen but they squandered an opportunity in Cincinnati. I think the Texans get their first win in a close game down in north Florida.

Pick: Texans win 23-17

Atlanta Falcons @ Carolina Panthers, 1:00 PM EST

Bijan Robinson is a specimen. He is the next great one at the running back position. Atlanta should continue to feed their running backs as I am sure their offensive linemen are loving the opportunity to maul defenders in the run game.

Bijan Robinson had 22 rushing attempts for 143 yards against the Minnesota Vikings. pic.twitter.com/I2Mdky96C4

— Nick Penticoff (@NickPenticoff) September 16, 2025

Pick: Falcons win 26-17

New York Jets @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 1:00 PM EST

Baker Mayfield and the Bucs eeek’d out a win on the last play of the game. If the Bucs contain the Jets running game, it becomes very difficult for them to keep pace with Baker and Co. The Bucs run defense with Vita Vea will be a key component to watch.

Pick: Bucs win 27-17

Las Vegas Raiders @ Washington Commanders, 1:00 PM EST

I’m taking the Raiders to upset the Commanders on the road. Here’s why. Jayden Daniels is banged up and may not even play. Washington also just lost Austin Ekeler to a torn achilles. They have 9 days to prepare for this game while Las Vegas only has 5 days. After being embarrassed by the Chargers on MNF, the offense relies on first rounder Ashton Jeanty to get back on track.

Pick: Raiders win 20-10

Green Bay Packers @ Cleveland Browns, 1:00 PM EST

The Packers have arguably the best defense in football. I don’t think that is because of Micah Parsons. He certainly adds to their case. But Jeff Hafley has done a great job of adding talent to his group and developing some of their early round picks. Cleveland meanwhile likes to bark at teams but has no bite…

Pick: Packers win 37-9

Los Angeles Rams @ Philadelphia Eagles, 1:00 PM EST

Reason why LA would win: They attack Philadelphia’s run defense with Kyren Williams and Blake Corum in order to open up the passing game for Stafford, especially through zone beater Puka Nacua. The defense then clamps down in the run game unlike in the two meetings last year.

no window too small for Matthew Stafford sheeesh pic.twitter.com/xcwy1VumYM

— NFL (@NFL) September 16, 2025

Reason why LA would lose: They try to rely too much on Stafford’s arm against Vic Fangio’s boa constrictor style of defense. The defense showed that it still has flaws in the run game and Barkley & Hurts use their legs to keep drives alive.

A big factor here could be Steve Avila’s availability at left guard. Justin Dedich posted strong grades with his run blocking but underwhelmed with his pass blocking. Avila/Dedich – Shelton – Dotson must give Stafford time for all of the in-breaking routes that they rely on to move the chains.

For good measure, this time the Rams find a way on the final drive of the game.

Pick: Rams win 29-23

Denver Broncos @ Los Angeles Chargers, 4:05 PM EST

Bo Nix has been inconsistent but what should be of concern for Denver is that their defense has not performed up to expectations. My pick here is going on Justin Herbert’s history for Denver. He is 4-1 at home and 1-3 on the road against DEN. Lucky for him…this one is home.

Pick: Chargers win 16-10

New Orleans Saints @ Seattle Seahawks, 4:05 PM EST

This one seems pretty straightforward. New Orleans will go on the road for the first time this season, away from the dome to the hostile confines of Seattle nonetheless. Seattle will give Spencer Rattler trouble considering they made Rodgers look pedestrian with 203 yards and two interceptions.

Pick: Seahawks win 27-10

Arizona Cardinals @ San Francisco 49ers, 4:25 PM EST

Aside from the Rams & Eagles, the Cardinals & 49ers is the other biggest game of the week. Two 2-0 clubs from the NFC West will square off in Santa Clara. Brock Purdy is still expected to be out so I’ll predict a Cardinals win on the road.

Pick: Cardinals win 23-16

Dallas Cowboys @ Chicago Bears, 4:25 PM EST

Brandon Aubrey is incredible. I think if the Cowboys elect to just kick field goals against the Bears, they should be able to win against the gray undershirt Caleb Williams-led offense.

Pick: Cowboys win 23-20

(Sunday Night Football)
Kansas City Chiefs @ New York Giants, 8:20 PM EST

I legitimately think the Giants could upset the Chiefs; sending them to an 0-3 record. Patrick Mahomes is having to scramble for his life through two weeks. Kansas City just doesn’t have the offensive line like they had from 2020-2023; paving the way for three Super Bowls in that time span. Here are their OL PFF grades: Simmons: 60.2, Suamataia: 58.4, Humphrey: 69.7, Smith: 64.1, and Taylor: 51.2. See…it’s just okay, which is why the Chiefs are 0-2.

This matchup fits well for New York with their defensive front featuring Dexter Lawrence, Brian Burns (3 sacks), Bobby Okereke, Kayvon Thibodeaux (1.5 sacks), and Abdul Carter (0.5 sacks).

I’ll say this though, just because the Chiefs start 0-3 doesn’t mean that I have them missing the playoffs…

Pick: Giants win 20-17

(Monday Night Football)
Detroit Lions @ Baltimore Ravens, 8:15 PM EST

The last time the Lions played at M&T Bank Stadium, the Ravens exposed Jared Goff. I don’t think we will get a 38-6 rout but Goff will be under duress and can’t afford to make a mistake. Problem is…he will.

Goff picked on 4th and 1 and this is just an insane statement game from the #Ravenspic.twitter.com/4iRZJOEMZZ

— JPA (@jasrifootball) October 22, 2023

The other factor here is that Jayden Daniels gave the Lions fits in the NFC Divisional round with his scrambling ability. Lamar Jackson will probably take a page out of that book for this one.

Pick: Ravens win 31-23

Who is your lock of the week? Upset of the week? Who wins: Rams/Eagles? Make your picks in the comments below!

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-odds/126661/nfl-week-3-picks-rams-eagles
 
Eagles radio: ‘Puka Nacua is not as good as people make him out to be’

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Puka Nacua doesn’t need bulletin board fodder to take over games every week, but he’s going to have it this weekend anyway when the Rams take on the Philadelphia Eagles for the fourth time in his career. On Friday, Philly sports radio host Joe DeCamara of 94.1 WIP implied that Nacua is overrated, per the X account Rams Bros:

“He’s not as good as people make him out to be. He’s not a top-5 WR in this league.”

We’ve seen Puka do a lot of amazing things in the past two years, so what could he have in store for the Eagles this Sunday if he’s at all extra motivated to prove himself as a top-5 receiver in the NFL?

Philly morning show lead host @JoeDeCamara on Puka Nacua this morning:

“He’s not as good as people make him out to be. He’s not a top-5 WR in this league”

The rest of the morning show hosts strongly disagreed. Puka is currently 4th in YPG, total yards and 1st in receptions. pic.twitter.com/hN1vaIcKph

— Rams Bros. (@RamsBrothers) September 19, 2025

Amazingly, DeCamara would say this having presumably watched Nacua play against the Eagles three times already and averaging almost 100 yards per game:

  • 2023: 7 catches for 71 yards, 1 TD
  • 2024: 9 catches for 117 yards
  • 2024 playoffs: 6 catches for 97 yards

Matthew Stafford has heavily targeted Nacua in these contests (average 12.3 targets per game against the Eagles) and that is likely to continue in Week 3. Nacua has caught 18 passes this season for 221 yards and is averaging 11 yards per target. This week, he’s going against an Eagles secondary that has had its struggles in the first two weeks.

Adoree’ Jackson has allowed 132 receiving yards, the most by any player in the NFL this season. Jackson is giving up 14.7 yards per completion and 9.4 yards per target with 45 yards after the catch.

Second-year pro Quinyon Mitchell has allowed 110 yards on eight receptions with a passer rating of 114.3 allowed. He’s giving up 8.5 yards per target. Cooper DeJean’s numbers have been better but hardly of the shutdown variety.

Now these could all be misleading stats — I guess we’ll find out on Sunday — but certainly Stafford, Puka, Davante Adams, and Sean McVay have an opportunity to attack the Eagles with iron on plastic if Nacua is matched up against Jackson.

Not everybody thinks that Nacua is overrated though. On Get Up this week, Harry Douglas called Nacua “one of the most underrated players” in the NFL.

"I think [Puka Nacua] is one of the most underrated players in the National Football League."@HDouglas83 shares his thoughts on Puka Nacua ahead of the Rams' game this Sunday against the Eagles ✍️ pic.twitter.com/BIKS4wJNmk

— Get Up (@GetUpESPN) September 19, 2025

In the same segment, Andrew Hawkins said Nacua was in a league of his own:

“Puka Nacua is playing at a different level than every other receiver in the NFL right now,” Hawkins said on ESPN’s “Get Up” on Thursday. “And, on top of that, his chemistry with Matthew Stafford is a thing of beauty. No one is playing as fast. No one is being as efficient. You get him the ball in space, he’s big, he blocks, he can run after the catch, he can run before the catch, he can get out of his break quicker than even some of the smaller receivers.”

Dan Orlovsky put him next to Ja’Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson:

“Puka is the best receiver in football that no one says is the best receiver in football,” Orlovsky said. “He’s that good. If we want to have the conversation with Justin [Jefferson] and Ja’Marr [Chase], Puka is right there.”

Nacua is top-3 in yards per route run and in territory with only two other players in the NFL so far:

We already knew Puka Nacua was the man but fellow Year 3 WRs Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Zay Flowers join him in the feakshow per route performers in the top right corner through two tweeks.

Doesn't feel like there's been enough discussion on Flowers, in particular, taking what… pic.twitter.com/aw30qoOorI

— Matt Harmon (@MattHarmon_BYB) September 16, 2025

And PFF has called Nacua the highest-graded receiver in the NFL since 2024:

The highest-graded WR since the start of last season:

Puka Nacua – 93.0 🐏 pic.twitter.com/yDBnGuUtgp

— PFF (@PFF) September 12, 2025

You don’t need to wake up the beast to compel Puka to have himself a day. He’s been doing that for the last 2+ seasons without most people ever feeling the need to call him out for anything. That’s not usually something that happens to fifth round picks, but Nacua is finding out what it’s like when your stock raises from 5th round to “top-5”.

That’s when they start to attack you, so that should only motivate Puka to start firing back. Let’s see what happens when you poke the Puka.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...126743/puka-nacua-rams-eagles-radio-overrated
 
How concerned should Rams be about Steve Avila’s injuries?

Rams LG Steve Avila


When the Los Angeles Rams drafted interior offensive lineman Steve Avila with the 36th overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, it was thought that he would be a staple on the offensive line for years to come. While Avila impressed as a rookie, he simply hasn’t taken that next step that would have been expected at this point.

Following a strong rookie season, the Rams considered moving Avila from left guard to center heading into his second year. This came after the Rams signed Jonah Jackson. With the combination of Jackson, Avila, and Dotson, the Rams would have an interior to excel in their duo-based run game that requires a more ‘at you’ blocking approach. Avila practiced at center for most of the offseason, but just weeks before the opener against the Detroit Lions, the Rams decided to move him back to left guard and put Jackson at center. Jackson had played just 24 snaps at center in the NFL. Additionally, he hadn’t played center full-time since his sophomore year at Rutgers.

Throughout the offseason, the Rams seemed adamant that Avila would play at center all up until the moment that they weren’t. The Rams may have been dealing with some injuries and Alaric Jackson’s suspension, but it also seems easy to connect the dots. The context clues suggest that Avila may not have picked up the responsibilities at center as quickly as the coaching staff had hoped.

From there, Avila got hurt in Week 1 and proceeded to miss the next seven games with a sprained MCL. From Weeks 10-18 Avila was fine, but took a step back in pass protection. His pass-blocking grade via PFF dropped from 65.0 to 50.6. Avila gave up a press once every 22.4 snaps compared to once ever 21.4 snaps his rookie season.

With a full offseason healthy, a lot was expected of Avila heading into year three. However, the former second round pick once again got injured in Week 1. Avila sprained an ankle which sidelined him for Week 2 against the Tennessee Titans. He is once again listed as doubtful heading into Week 3. If Avila does miss the game against the Philadelphia Eagles, he will have missed nine out of the last 20 regular season games.

That’s a concerning trend considering what the expectation is for Avila. It’s difficult for him to be the staple on the interior if he’s available only half the time. It makes his pending contract negotiation after this season that much more complicated. The Rams will probably wait until the end of next year, but he is someone that they will have to consider for an extension. Sometimes the best ability is availability and Avila simply has not been available.

However, Avila has also very clearly been the best left guard that the Rams have had over the last three years. In the eight games that Avila has missed, the substituting player has averaged a run-blocking grade of 60.25, a pass-blocking grade of 39.5, and allowed 2.5 pressures per game. That’s a combination of Jonah Jackson, Logan Bruss, and Justin Dedich. Last season, Avila’s final PFF grades were 70.6 in run-blocking, 50.6 in pass-blocking and he gave up 1.9 pressures per game. There is a drop-off when Avila isn’t on the field.

The start to Avila’s career isn’t too far off than that of Rodger Saffold’s. Saffold started all 16 games as a rookie before playing just 19 of his next 32 games. Saffold played just one full season between 2011 and 2017. He missed multiple games in four out of five years between 2011 and 2015. Still, Saffold remained one of the more important players on the Rams offensive line until he left in 2019.

Obviously the hope is that Avila gets healthy and is able to stay that way going forward. However, it’s also hard to call him injury prone at this point. He didn’t deal with injuries in college at TCU and a sprained ankle can simply be a case of getting unlucky.

The worst thing that the Rams could do would be to give up on Avila and then have him thrive elsewhere. That’s something that the Rams have benefitted from in the cases of Austin Corbett and Kevin Dotson. Avila has shown enough flashes to warrant continued belief in his long-term potential, but he needs show that he can be relied on consistently.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...6772/rams-injuries-offensive-line-steve-avila
 
Get fired up! Which Rams need a pre-game pep talk?

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The Los Angeles Rams are preparing to play what is probably one of their most important games of the season, a 10 AM road trip to Philadelphia to face the 2-0 Eagles on Sunday. What do you want to say to the Rams to remind them of the jobs that need to be executed in order for L.A. to be 3-0 instead of Philly?

Does Sean McVay need to run the ball more and with Blake Corum?

Does Justin Dedich need to have the best game of his life if he starts in place of Steve Avila and against Jalen Carter?

Does Matthew Stafford need to play clean, errorless football for 60 minutes?

Who needs to have the best day on defense to contain Saquon Barkley from another big game against the Rams?

Or do you want to vent anything about the Eagles players, coaches, or team? Are they overrated? Is Jalen Hurts underrated?


I’ll post some situations and interesting stats in the comments below, all you have to do is scroll, type, comment, reply, hit rec if you agree with somebody, and read.

Get fired up, Rams fans. The team is less than 24 hours from one of their games of the year so what do you need to get off your chest about it?

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...-fired-up-which-rams-need-a-pre-game-pep-talk
 
4 under the radar Eagles to know before Sunday’s game

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All eyes will be on Sunday’s matchup between the Los Angeles Rams and the Philadelphia Eagles. The winner—with both teams at 2-0—will likely join the Green Bay Packers among the top of the class in the NFC Conference.

There are several under the radar Eagles to know before they host the Rams this weekend. These players may not be household names, but they will play a significant role in determining the outcome in Week 3.

1 – Adoree’ Jackson, CB​


Jackson has been in the NFL since 2017, when he was selected towards the middle of the first round by the Tennessee Titans. The veteran finished his rookie contract in Tennessee and then joined the New York Giants between 2021 and 2024. He’s in his first season with Philadelphia, though the Eagles succession plan at corner hasn’t gone as well as they hoped.

The Eagles’ selection of Georgia’s Kelee Ringo in the fourth round of 2024 was met with high praise, considering that Ringo was considered at times during the draft process as a fringe first round prospect. He’s failed to break through Philly’s lineup in three seasons.

Instead Jackson emerged as Philly’s starter opposite second-year corner Quinyon Mitchell and along side last year’s second round slot corner Cooper DeJean. Jackson is the obvious weak link in the Eagles secondary, and the unfortunate truth for the Eagles is that they don’t have a real alternative. This could be an Achilles heel that they battle for the duration of the season, barring a move at the trade deadline.

According to Pro Football Focus (PFF), Jackson has graded as the 16th-best out of 19 defenders to play for Philadelphia this season. He has a coverage grade of just 40.6 with two missed tackles and a tackling grade of 45.6. The Rams will look to attack Jackson as often as possible—both through the air and by forcing him to bring the ball carrier down—just as the Eagles’ first two opponents have done so far this year.

In coverage as the nearest defender, Jackson has been targeted 12 times. This is a tied for the team lead with Mitchell, though the results of these targets are nowhere the same.

  • Mitchell: seven catches (58.3% comp) for 61 yards, a penalty, and a passer rating of 71.9
  • Jackson: eight catches (66.7 comp) for 129 yards, a penalty, and a passer rating of 102.4

If the Rams can draw a matchup between Davante Adams and Jackson, this will be an advantage in LA’s favor. Puka Nacua should also be able to take advantage, though he’s doing his best work in zone coverage through two games.

Adoree Jackson has inside help from the safety here but gets spun around and beat to the sideline by George Pickens. It's an incredible throw by Dak, but watching Jackson on film is just frustration after frustration. pic.twitter.com/ICSwGWLFVb

— Shane Haff (@ShaneHaffNFL) September 8, 2025

2 – Andrew Mukuba, DB​


One of the most fun facts surrounding this matchup is that it features the only two active NFL players born in Zimbabwe: Nate Landman of the Rams and Mukuba.

The Eagles drafted Mukuba in the second round this spring out of Texas. He’s playing multiple roles in Vic Fangio’s defense, which inherently asks a lot of safeties on the backend. The rookie has handled his duties well, and he’s been a surprisingly important part of Philly’s run defense.

Reed Blankenship is the Eagles’ primary free safety, as he’s aligned deep on nearly all of his snaps. Mukuba plays free safety 70% of the time with the rest of his snaps coming either in the box or as the slot defender.

.@Eagles rookie Andrew Mukuba was in the right place at the right time for this clutch INT 🙌

(by @progressive) pic.twitter.com/zBIwNutU1Q

— NFL (@NFL) September 17, 2025

3 – Tyler Steen, RG​


Steen was a 2023 third round pick out of Alabama. This is his first season as the full-time starter, and he’s largely been the weakest link on an otherwise stout offensive line.

Steen has been better as a pass blocker through he’s allowed the third-most pressures on the line behind Landon Dickerson (five, battled early injuries) and Jordan Mailata (four) and accounted for 17% of the pressures on Jalen Hurts.

But as a run blocker, Steen is clearly the worst among Philly’s starting five and this is a reason why Saquon Barkley hasn’t been able to fill up the box score as well as he did a year ago. Last year’s offensive player of the year averaged 5.7 yards part carry in 2024 and this year that mark has lowered to 3.7. Barkley is averaging under 75 yards per game.

Barkley obviously had his way with the Rams in two matchups last season. Los Angeles added defensive reinforcements in Landman and interior defensive lineman Poona Ford. Is this enough to slow Barkley in what seems to be a down year? It could be a major factor in deciding the outcome of Sunday’s game.

Tyler Steen gets bulldozed by George Karlaftis into Jalen Hurts pic.twitter.com/NmP3KHXfnl

— phyilly (@EmbiidHoops) September 15, 2025

4 – Josh Uche, EDGE​


Similar to Jackson, Uche is a veteran with a new team (his third in the last two seasons). Uche was a second round pick with the New England Patriots in 2020 and has filled a role as a situational pass rusher since. New England traded the veteran to the Kansas City Chiefs midseason last year, though Uche was not a natural fit in Steve Spagnuolo’s defense.

The early season results for Uche have been impressive. According to PFF, he’s on pace for a career season from a metric standpoint. His pass rushing grade of 90.4 tops his previous high from 2022 of 87.8.

While he has yet to record a sack, Uche has earned four pressures on only 30 pass rushing snaps. This is third behind the other Eagles edge defenders who have had more opportunities: Nolan Smith (six on 53 rushes), Jalyx Hunt (five on 37), Za’Darius Smith (two on 14, signed after Week 1).

It’s worth keeping an eye on Uche when he’s on the field, because when given chances he’s been highly productive this year. It’s of the upmost important that the Rams protect Matthew Stafford, who looks unphased by his back injury but is not yet out of the woods.

Josh Uche playing like it's 2022. Could be another great signing for Howie pic.twitter.com/9xBPtYqVmx

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) September 5, 2025

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...-the-radar-eagles-to-know-before-sundays-game
 
What are the silver linings to Rams loss?

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The Rams suffered a heartbreaking loss at the hands of the Eagles on Sunday, but at least Matthew Stafford reached another career milestone by moving himself into ninth in all-time passing touchdowns. This comes two weeks after he reached 60,000 passing yards against the Texans.

This is maybe not the most important news of the day, but it is some good news for Stafford and his eventual bid for the Hall of Fame. What are your silver linings from the Rams on Sunday?

Is it Puka Nacua’s historic run as a number one receiver? Davante Adams scoring a touchdown? Blake Corum getting more involved in the offense.

We know: That loss sucked. But share your silver linings in the comments below.

Moving up in the rankings.

Matthew Stafford is now Tied with Matt Ryan for 9th All-Time with 381 regular season TD passes.

19 more for 400. pic.twitter.com/NjuUiuKsZQ

— Stafford9 (@LAR9MS) September 21, 2025

Stafford hits a milestone​


During the third quarter of LA’s loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, Stafford was able to hit Kyren Williams for a 10-yard touchdown that helped him push his career total to 382 TD passes, moving him past former Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan. The veteran QB entered the game needing two touchdowns to reach the high benchmark.

Stafford, 37, is one of two active players in the top 10 on the all-time TD passes leaderboard, with Pittsburgh Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers being the other. Stafford could potentially catch the next quarterback in front of him, however, it would most-likely take him playing at least another season as Ben Rolisberger currently sits 36 touchdown passes ahead of him with 418. If Stafford is able to eventually reach the mark, Dan Marino (420) and Philip Rivers (421) would be very close after.

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Stafford now sits 10th all-time in career passing yards, as well as ninth in career passing touchdowns. He also has a Super Bowl ring and is known as one of the most clutch and tough quarterbacks to play the game. Stafford spoke recently about what it means to him to be hitting all of these long-term career milestones.

“The cool thing about playing quarterback, and my thought on it is, I can’t throw for any of those yards without every other ten players on the field, ten other guys, doing their jobs and so, it’s really cool I share it with so many people, and so many teammates and a bunch of coaches and, you know, it’s not ”oh, that was a cool year or a cool two years” I mean, it’s been a long time and a lot of people have sacrificed a lot to help me out along the way and I appreciate each and every single one of them. It’s an amazing thing.”

Many argue if Stafford belongs in the Hall of Fame or not, citing his lack of post season success prior to coming to Los Angeles as a major reason to keep him out, but with each new record and career milestone Stafford’s statistics are starting to make the argument against him harder and harder to defend.

Do you think Stafford is a Hall of Famer?

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...ams-matthew-stafford-career-passing-yards-9th
 
Rams Rookie QB Watch: Power Ranking my top-10 QBs after Week 4

Oklahoma QB John Mateer


If there is a silver lining to the Los Angeles Rams losing on Sunday, it’s that the Atlanta Falcons also lost. That makes one of the Rams’ first round picks that much better with the Falcons sitting at 1-2 through three weeks.

Every week throughout the college football season, I will be watching some of the top quarterback prospects for 2026 and rating their performances. Now that we are four weeks into the college football season, I thought it would be a good time to do a power rankings of how I see the college quarterbacks at this point. If the first four weeks have shown anything, it is that while this class may not be as good at the top as it was hyped up to be, there is some value in some of the quarterbacks whose stock will continue to rise.

1. Garrett Nussmeier, LSU​


Through four weeks, Nussmeier is my top quarterback in this draft class. He simply has the poise and confidence that others on this list have lacked at times. The LSU quarterback has been the most consistent player at the position and it’s easy to see him processing defenses live. That’s something that you don’t see a lot from other college quarterbacks. Said one NFL Scout on Nussmeier,

“Instinctive and finds a way…He’s got a great feel for the position and a good arm.”

Nussmeier may not be the most exciting quarterback prospect given that he’s more of a pocket passer. However, he does show some ability to improvise and make plays outside the pocket. Four of LSU’s next five opponents are ranked teams in the SEC. The other is South Carolina with LaNorris Sellers. Nussemeier has risen to the occasion every step of the way so far.

Garrett Nussmeier does all the little things so well. Throws this TD with such great anticipation. Looks like the most pro-ready QB in the class. pic.twitter.com/SgXXJmhUCX

— Bobby Football (@Rob__Paul) September 14, 2025

2. John Mateer, Oklahoma​


John Mateer might be that quarterback this season that shoots up draft boards because of a great final season in college. From the end of the third quarter into the fourth quarter, Mateer completed 11 straight passes against Auburn. One of those was a fantastic throw along the right sideline that dropped right into his wide receiver’s hands. On the next play, Mateer called his own number and ran for the go-ahead touchdown.

In a recent poll done by ESPN, Mateer got three votes from NFL Scouts on who they thought would be the top projected quarterback in the upcoming draft. If Mateer plays well through the rest of the SEC schedule, it’s hard not to see him rising further. This is a quarterback that screams McVay. He has the intangibles and is able to make plays with his legs while not relying on them. Mateer is also very comfortable from the pocket and at 21 would be a great option to sit behind Matthew Stafford.

John Mateer could have ran this and placed it in his WRs hand and I’m not sure if it’s placed any better.

Mateer screams McVay QB.

pic.twitter.com/et6IiEk6We

— Blaine Grisak 💭 (@bgrisakTST) September 20, 2025

3. Carson Beck, Miami​


Carson Beck has been an interesting evaluation through four weeks. He has one of the best pass-blocking offensive lines in college football and a very good group of wide receivers. This is a case where multiple things can be true at the same time. Beck is probably benefitting from the situation around him in Miami. At the same time, he’s also reminding people why he was considered a first-round talent. As one NFL Scout said, “Let’s see if Beck can continue his renaissance, because there’s enough ability there.”

Beck didn’t have a great game against Florida and will have a bye week before going up against Florida State. It’s easy to see Beck as a starter in a McVay offense. Still, when watching Beck, it’s hard not to see a Jimmy Garoppolo caliber of quarterback. He’s someone that’s going to need to be in a great situation and likely won’t elevate those around him. That doesn’t mean he can’t be a quality starter.

4. Drew Allar, Penn State​


Penn State is finally out of its cupcake schedule and are set to begin their Big Ten slate. Because Allar hasn’t played a quality opponent, he’s been tough to evaluate so far this season. The game against Oregon on Saturday will be a big test and then in early November, the Nittany Lions will travel to Ohio State before hosting Indiana.

Allar has a lot to prove over the next month and a half. It’s very possible his first round draft stock will be decided over that period. If Allar shows enough in those games, he is probably a top-10 pick. However, if the same Allar over the last two years shows up in those games, he’s probably more of a second round player. Allar has a big arm and can do some special things, but needs to find consistency or he may just be another Will Levis.

5. Fernando Mendoza, Indiana​


Saturday was the first time that Fernando Mendoza played a quality opponent this season and did he deliver. Against a top-10 opponent, Mendoza went 21-for-23 while throwing five touchdowns. Much like Mateer, it would not be surprising to see Mendoza skyrocket up quarterback rankings over the next few months. Against Illinois, Mendoza became only the second FBS player with five passing touchdowns and a 90 percent completion percentage against an AP ranked opponent in the last 30 years.

Indiana is at Iowa on Saturday before a bye week prior to playing at Oregon. If Indiana continues to play at this pace, Mendoza could enter the first round conversation. He’s one of the more exciting quarterbacks in college football this season.

so this is Fernando Mendoza pic.twitter.com/e6EGIECqfX

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) September 21, 2025

6. LaNorris Sellers, South Carolina​


Every time that I start to take a step back on LaNorris Sellers, he reels me right back in. While the Gamecocks lost to Mizzou, Sellers played his best game of the season. His athleticism pops off of the screen and he’s able to get a lot of zip on the ball. There aren’t many quarterbacks who can make the plays that Sellers does. According to ESPN’s poll, Sellers is the projected top quarterback,

“He’s got most physical talent. His ability to scramble and make plays with his feet as a runner. He’s instinctive and the ball comes out quick. He’s got a unique talent level. The kid, his story and how he got there. He’s got a toughness to him. It intrigues people. He’s got the makeup, intangibles and ability to run. He’s got the most potential to be an impact player.”

While Sellers has the talent, he would probably benefit from another year at the college level. He’s still very raw and needs to continue developing. Sitting behind Stafford would be a good situation, but this also doesn’t feel like the type of quarterback McVay would want. It would feel like Kyle Shanahan falling into the same athleticism trap that he did with Trey Lance. Sellers is one of my favorite quarterbacks in this class, but it’s hard to see the fit with the Rams.

You take the highs with the lows at this stage, but LaNorris Sellers’ highs are through the thermosphere.

Look at the sheer RPMs on this pass rolling to his left. A near incomprehensible blend of athleticism and arm talent.

pic.twitter.com/i1NGBMQyH7

— Ian Cummings (@IC_Draft) September 21, 2025

7. Sawyer Robertson, Baylor​


Saturday was the first time I watched Sawyer Robertson closely. While he had played well to start the season, he was finally tested against a good Arizona State team. Baylor came up short, but it was hard to not be impressed with some aspects of his game. There are flashes of really good throws into tight windows as seen in the touchdown below. At the same time, he can struggle with accuracy.

Robertson likely isn’t going to enter the first-round conversations. Much of his game is good, but not great and then he has his flaws. At this point, Robertson more of a mid-round quarterback that you look to develop. Still, he’s a fun player to watch.

Sawyer Robertson is CLUTCH 🐻
pic.twitter.com/RTjESW7RX6

— SleeperCFB (@SleeperCFB) September 21, 2025

8. Sam Leavitt, Arizona State​


Leavitt probably had his best game of the year against Baylor. He was 22-for-32 for 221 yards and a touchdown. He also added 61 yards on the ground. Much like Sellers, Leavitt is probably a player that would benefit from returning to school for another year. He made some nice plays with his arm against Baylor, but relies too much on his athleticism at times.

With that said, Leavitt clearly has the arm talent and creates positive plays out of structure on a weekly basis. There is a very good player here, but he would be better off waiting to come out in 2027.

Sam Leavitt is good for something like this every week pic.twitter.com/sekaiqrbzh

— Jake García (@Jake_M_Garcia) September 21, 2025

9. Conner Weigman, Houston​


Weigman was a player that I was high on last year, but he just didn’t have the season that some expected. While he didn’t play this past week, Weigman may enter my weekly watch rotation. He’s having a fantastic year at Houston and showing off some of the athleticism and arm talent that make him an intriguing prospect.

I want to see more of him as a passer, but Weigman could be one of ‘my guys’ come draft season. He may not get the hype of some of the others on this list, but he is very quietly having a good year.

Folks, Conner Weigman is back pic.twitter.com/kiZEPMiYpo

— Tim Verghese (@TimVerghese) September 13, 2025

10. Cade Klubnik, Clemson​


At this point, I am probably out on Cade Klubnik. There’s no doubt that he has the tools, but he lacks a lot of the consistency needed to warrant being taken as high as he’s been projected. This is another player that you take in the third round and hope to get the most out of him. There has been a lack of accountability from Clemson this year and Klubnik is part of that. It’s ok to show frustration after a game, but you still have to be accountable as the starting quarterback.

These types of answers are a red flag. The Tigers are now 1-3 after being projected as potential national championship contenders. If Klubnik responds well, there is still time to improve. However, all signs currently point to that not being the case.

Whoa. Talking about how Clemson played well in a tempo offense today, Clemson QB Cade Klubnik brings up — unprompted — that he felt like Syracuse seemed to have a guy getting injured after Clemson made a big play. “It’s up to them if they wanna be honest about that” pic.twitter.com/QANn10rBKt

— Chapel Fowler (@chapelfowler) September 20, 2025

Who to Watch this week​

  • TCU @ Arizona State: 9/26, 9 p.m. – Sam Leavitt
  • Houston @ Oregon State: 9/26, 10:30 p.m. – Conner Weigman
  • LSU @ Ole Miss: 9/27, 3:30 p.m. – Garrett Nussmeier
  • Indiana @ Iowa: 9/27, 3:30 p.m. – Fernando Mendoza
  • Oregon @ Penn State: 9/27, 7:30 p.m. – Drew Allar
  • Kentucky @ South Carolina: 9/27, 7:45 p.m. – LaNorris Sellers

The big game here will be Oregon at Penn State. As mentioned earlier, this is an opportunity for Drew Allar to prove himself. Garrett Nussmeier and Fernando Mendoza both have a tough conference opponents on the road. On Friday night, I’ll be locked in on Conner Weigman against Oregon State.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...29/rams-qb-targets-2026-nfl-draft-john-mateer
 
Which Rams stat tells the story of the 2025 team?

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If you had to encapsulate the 2025 Rams over their first three games in a single number, which number would you choose? Would it be a stat, a dollar amount, or some other numerical fact?

Would it be ranking first in overall PFF Grade?

Would it be $10 million, representing every dollar being paid to Tutu Atwell?

Would it be 35.1, the average starting field position for the Rams, which is the best in the league?

Would it be 3 blocked kicks for the field goal unit?

Which stats about the Los Angeles Rams do you think tell the most complete story about how these first three games have gone? You can browse the Rams profootballreference page before you answer if that helps, or you can check out how Les Snead has spent L.A.’s cap money this season at OTC, or just do a search on twitter if you like. Maybe you know the stat by heart already.

Share your answers in the comments below and rec the replies that you think are most deserving of attention. If we get enough of them, I’ll share your answers in a post tomorrow.

The Rams shared some positive stats on Twitter on Tuesday, noting how the Rams rank first in overall PFF grade, second in passing/run blocking/tackling grade, and third in total offense grade:

According to @PFF after Week 3, the Rams rank:
⚫️1st in overall grade (85.9)
⚫️2nd in passing grade (89.9)
⚫️2nd in run blocking grade (71.7)
⚫️2nd in tackling grade (73.1)
⚫️3rd in offensive grade (79.9)
⚫️4th in defensive grade (79.3)
⚫️4th in coverage grade (76.8)
⚫️6th in… pic.twitter.com/bOF1awPvs1

— Los Angeles Rams PR (@TheLARamsPR) September 23, 2025

Do you think those numbers best represent the 2025 Rams so far? Do you see a team that is the best team in the NFL?

What about the second-best run blocking team in the NFL, is that a fair ranking by what you’ve seen? The Rams are 10th in rushing yards per carry. What about second-best tackling? Is the tackling better than you’ve seen in past years?

There are also the stats that the Rams would never share with you, like Emmanuel Forbes’ coverage grade or Beaux Limmer’s blocking grade. There’s Ethan Evans ranking 30th in punting and Josh Karty getting three kicks blocked, albeit not his fault necessarily.

The Rams are 5th in points per drive and 8th in points per drive allowed. They’ve got the best starting field position and the second-best starting field position allowed at 25.2.

Then there’s the biggest number of all: 2 wins, 1 loss.

73 points scored, 61 points allowed, +12 differential.

Puka Nacua leads the NFL with 29 catches and 333 yards.

He also has 35 targets compared to 29 for Davante Adams. Nobody else on teh team has more than 7 and that’s Kyren Williams. The next-most by a wide receiver is 5 for Jordan Whittington. The Rams paid Tutu Atwell $10 million for 3 targets and 4 yards.

Blake Corum is averaging 7.1 yards per carry but has only had 14 totes.

Byron Young has 4 sacks. That’s more than Jared Verse, Kobie Turner, Josaiah Stewart, and Braden Fiske combined.

The Rams could be a top-5 NFL team. Which numbers tell you that they are?

They could also struggle against the Colts, 49ers, and Ravens in their next three games. Which numbers tell you that they might?

Let us know your answers in the comments. Which number best represents the 2025 Rams so far?

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...t/127070/rams-stats-pff-grades-power-rankings
 
Why do the Rams suck in the red zone?

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19 of 32 NFL teams score touchdowns on offensive red zone possessions this season. The Los Angeles Rams rank 23rd at 46%, putting them in the bottom third among their peers in the league.

Let’s call a spade a spade. The Rams suck in the red zone this year, and it’s a continuation of a multi-season problem that Sean McVay and Matthew Stafford cannot seem to shake. In this same metric, LA ranked 25th in 2024.

Rams went 2-for-5 in the red zone and the first instinct of way too many is just to IMMEDIATELY blame Sean McVay. Tell me where he was supposed to be better?

Give me the play and the play-call?

Rams had 3 TDs. Staffford missed Adams on slant. Shelton hold. Adams missed opp.

— Blaine Grisak 💭 (@bgrisakTST) September 23, 2025

In order to solve the problem, you must first identify the root causes. These are the five issues I would boil the dilemma down to.

1 – Lack of quarterback mobility​


For as much as Stafford brings to the Rams offense, it’s worth admitting that there are legitimate drawbacks to starting an age 37 quarterback with a bad back. Stafford could be the least mobile signal caller in all the NFL, and that was effectively confirmed last week when 330+ lbs. Jordan Davis ran a farther distance to meet Stafford at the sideline on third and two.

How much easier is the lives of player callers when they have a quarterback that can threaten with his legs at the goal line? This isn’t something the Buffalo Bills have to worry about with Josh Allen. Sure, the Philadelphia Eagles benefit from a virtual cheat code in the tush push. All three of the other teams in the NFC West can count on their quarterback to win with their legs when the passing lanes are clogged. The Rams themselves have difficulty defending these types of players.

It’s unwise and wild to blame Sean McVay for LA’s red zone troubles. He’s calling plays with one hand tied behind his back.

The replacement for Stafford—whether it comes in 2026 or thereafter—must have a mobile element in order to access new areas of McVay’s playbook.

2 – Is Davante Adams helping this offense?​


When the Rams signed Davante Adams they billed it as a solution to a years-long problem that had only temporary been solved by the likes of Sammy Watkins and Odell Beckham, Jr. But now that LA has Adams, the offense feels more disjointed and forced than it ever has under McVay (save for 2022, the year we all wiped from our memory).

While Puka Nacua has caught 83% of the passes thrown his direction through three weeks, Adams is converting less than one in two of his opportunities:

  • 12 receptions on 28 targets (46.4%) for 213 yards, two TD’s
  • Four receptions on 11 contested catch targets (36.4%)

Adams is supposed to be a problem solver for this offense. So far he’s introduced new challenges and it’s coming at the cost of lost efficiency.

Quinyon Mitchell had Davante Adams on lockdown. pic.twitter.com/lOl1P2j8ex

— Victor Williams (@ThePhillyPod) September 23, 2025

3 – Quarterback accuracy​


NFL statistics usually regard the red zone as inside the 20-yard line. Most coaching staffs view the red area as within the 12-yard line. Stafford has the second-most attempts within 10 yards. This is how he has fared in these areas of the field, roughly:

  • Inside 20: 9 of 17 (53% completion) for 54 yards and four TD’s
  • Inside 10: 4 of 10 (40% completion) for 24 yards and two TD’s

These are the QB’s with the same or lower completion rate within 10 yards as Stafford. Tell me if you believe this is good company.

  • Spencer Rattler (40%)
  • Cam Ward (40%)
  • Trevor Lawrence (40%)
  • Justin Herbert (40%)
  • Drake Maye (37.5%)
  • Patrick Mahomes (37.5%; bad this year)
  • CJ Stroud (25%)
  • Daniel Jones (20%)
  • Russell Wilson (13.33%; 2 of 15)

Simply put, this production is not good enough. Stafford is a high-end processor and must identify the open man in the red zone. If he’s locking on to Adams and forcing the ball, this is something that must come to an end soon.

These are throws that we've grown accustomed to Matthew Stafford hitting with ease in the Rams offense.

Play 1: Sails slant over Adams' head. Probs a TD.

Play 2: Tougher throw, but overthrows Adams on quick out on 3rd down.

Play 3: Throws high over Nacua on 3rd down. pic.twitter.com/3QnWl5ZBnT

— Blaine Grisak 💭 (@bgrisakTST) September 23, 2025

4 – Offensive line injuries and woes​


Kyren Williams and Blake Corum each have one goal line touchdown. Williams watched one of his scores erased from the board in Week 3 against the Eagles because of an obvious holding penalty called on Coleman Shelton, double-leg tackled a defender.

It’s no secret that Steve Avila and Kevin Dotson are not healthy and the offensive has suffered as a result. Justin Dedich has been the primary replacement for Avila and is slight of frame and outmatched. Beaux Limmer has also filled in and been inept in short stints. Shelton is not living up to his billing as one of the team’s key free agent additions from this offseason.

You can cross your fingers and hope for clean bills of health for Avila and Dotson. Shelton is not likely going anywhere and needs to perform better, though in his defense it does help when your neighbors are more sturdy in their assignment.

5 – Personnel swings & misses​

got to finally see the glimpses of what makes Terrance Ferguson so exciting for the Rams. Vertical ability and explosiveness with the ball in his hands. pic.twitter.com/OKs4e7ZsiO

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) August 25, 2025

Adams is far from the first player the Rams have acquired to help solve their red zone issues.

Last offseason the team targeted the 6-7, 265 lbs. Colby Parkinson to catch rebounds in the end zone while Tyler Higbee was unavailable with a knee injury. Parkinson was an afterthought in the offense for most of the 2024 season despite playing often, and he’s since been relegated to a primarily blocking role.

This spring the Rams spent their first draft choice—after trading down with the Atlanta Falcons to earn an extra first round pick in 2026—on Terrance Ferguson. You’d think a team with struggles scoring near the goal line would turn to their athletic TE that is 6-5, 256 lbs. Instead, Ferguson has barely played on offense (when Parkinson was out with an injury in Week 2) and was a healthy scratch in the third game in Philly.

But Ferguson isn’t the only rookie that isn’t seeing the field. While Jarquez Hunter was not drafted to be a bruising red zone rushing threat, he is still a dynamic player with a physical running style who could in theory add a speed element in the backfield that LA currently does not have.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-angeles-rams-news/127074/why-do-the-rams-suck-in-the-red-zone
 
Is Terrance Ferguson behind schedule?

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The 2025 NFL Draft featured two of the highest-rated tight end prospects of the last 10 years in Colston Loveland and Tyler Warren, but as a whole the class was regularly cited as one of the deepest and most talented of the year. Fourth in that order was Terrance Ferguson, the tight end that the Rams drafted 46th overall after Loveland and Warren went in the first 14 picks and then Mason Taylor was 42nd.

It is no secret to Rams fans that Ferguson has been buried on L.A.’s depth chart and a healthy scratch in Week 3 against the Philadelphia Eagles, a game that saw Colby Parkinson, Tyler Higbee, and Davis Allen combine for one catch, three yards, and three targets.

But can you really blame Sean McVay? I mean, Parkinson’s 21 snaps, no targets, probably-replaceable blocking was the only reason the Rams even had a chance to beat the Eagles!

Braden Fiske and Colby Parkinson are ACTIVE against the Eagles.

Inactive for the Rams: Steve Avila, Nick Hampton, Stetson Bennett, Terrance Ferguson and D.J. Humphries.

— Sarah Barshop (@sarahbarshop) September 21, 2025

Seeking out any excuse possible for why Ferguson is still less important to the Rams than Parkinson and Davis Allen, a third-year player with a career average of 4.8 yards per game, McVay claimed on his team-sponsored Monday podcast that Allen and Parkinson are better than every piece of evidence indicates and that the rookie’s training camp injury caused him to miss a little bit too much practice:

“I think we’ve got tremendous depth at the tight end position,” he said. “Got a guy in Tyler Higbee who’s been doing it at a high clip for a long time. Colby Parkinson, I think, has taken tremendous steps, as has Davis Allen. And you really look at it, (he) did miss some critical time throughout training camp with the groin injury.”

It’s a very difficult point to argue against: Any NFL player’s most crucial learning time is during his rookie year. Not just the season, but the offseason and the preseason. Ferguson missing training camp would cause him to fall behind veterans in many instances and many players on many teams.

However, Ferguson has been practicing for over a month since his return to training camp. He looked better as a receiver in his only preseason appearance than Allen and Parkinson have ever looked in a Rams uniform. Ferguson is a 22-year-old rookie who played 53 college games at Oregon and though his blocking had been described as “developmental” and “a work in progress” before the draft, nobody ever cited him as a long-term project as if he was Jacob Harris.

If anything, the Rams tight end draft pick who might be most like Ferguson is…Brycen Hopkins. Said to be one of the most “NFL-ready” tight ends in the 2020 draft class, a prospect whose father spent 13 seasons in the NFL, Hopkins was a healthy scratch for most of his first two seasons in the league and only caught one pass for nine yards going into his third year.

Hopkins was not a seventh round pick who gave the Rams a couple of good years. He was a fourth round pick who gave the Rams nothing aside from a weirdly efficient Super Bowl appearance.

Brycen Hopkins has more super bowl receiving yards than George Kittle pic.twitter.com/VIUti13GO8

— LA Rams Nation (@RamsNationCP) June 28, 2023

This is not to say that anyone should be worried about Terrance Ferguson​


It’s hard to believe at this point, I know. This is not a sky-is-falling post about Ferguson’s healthy scratch and saying that he’s going to turn out like Hopkins or Harris. Rookies are rookies and too many players have had really bad years compared to everything that happened after their first season.

This is merely an observation of the reality we are living in: The Rams first pick isn’t playing right now even though he’s at the same position as one of the worst players on the team and McVay is running 12 personnel on 30% of his offensive snaps.

It is probably because L.A. is running out of 12 personnel so often that Parkinson is playing over Ferguson, but at a certain point we have to ask if 5 or 6 blocking plays from a tight end are more valuable than opening up the passing offense for Matthew Stafford with a guy who might be the third-best receiving option on the team.

And if Ferguson is worse than Allen as a receiver, that’s a little weird. It’s even weird if he’s worse than Higbee, who currently has four catches for 37 yards. How do we know that we’re ever going to see the old Higbee again and the old Higbee wasn’t a great receiver to begin with…

Comparing rookie tight end snaps​


It is around now that many of you are thinking that tight ends take a long time to develop and maybe it’s normal for rookies to be scratched, even second round picks. Let’s take a look then.

These are the snap counts for rookie tight ends (draft pick number):

  • Tyler Warren, 158 snaps (14th)
  • Harold Fannin, 143 snaps (67th)
  • Mason Taylor, 141 snaps (42nd)
  • Colston Loveland, 80 snaps (10th)
  • Jackson Hawes, 77 snaps (173rd)
  • Gunnar Helm, 72 snaps (120th)
  • Elijah Arroyo, 70 snaps (50th)
  • Mitchell Evans, 35 snaps (163rd)
  • Ben Yurosek, 27 snaps (undrafted)
  • Oronde Gadsen II, 22 snaps (165th)
  • Cameron Latu, 11 snaps (101st)
  • Moliki Matavao, 5 snaps (248th)
  • Ferguson, 4 snaps (46th)
  • Treyton Welch, 4 snaps (undrafted)

Ferguson has fewer snaps than five players who were day three picks and one who was undrafted.

Fannin is the most interesting because although the third round pick might not have been McVay’s exact cup of tea at tight end, he was often ranked higher than Ferguson. Fannin has been one of the rookie darlings of the NFL through three games with the Browns, catching 15 passes for 136 yards and if his blocking leaves something to be desired, well…clearly he’s not the only rookie tight end with that issue.

Fannin caught 117 passes for 1,555 yards and 10 touchdowns in 13 games as a senior at Bowling Green. College stats can vary for any number of reasons but Ferguson had 1,537 receiving yards in his entire four-year career at Oregon.

Harold Fannin Jr. seems extremely strong pound for pound. What is this??? pic.twitter.com/zjwZE5DemH

— Hayden Winks (@HaydenWinks) September 22, 2025

NFL Draft Buzz had Fannin third on their TE rankings and Ferguson was only seventh. He was behind Arroyo, Taylor, and Helm.

Arroyo, considered a projection pick when he was taken by Seattle at 2.50, has played in 40% of the Seahawks snaps already. He only played one full season of college football. Mason Taylor has played in 78% of the snaps for the Jets, assuming a TE1 role despite only being 21. Helm was a fourth round pick by the Titans and he’s played in 37% of the snaps as TE2.

Taylor missed over a week of training camp after suffering a high ankle sprain. Loveland had offseason surgery on his AC joint and didn’t really get to work until training camp. There are reasons for things and then there are excuses and nobody is saying that Ferguson’s injury is an excuse, but we do know of many players who missed some training camp as rookies and were too good to hold back.

Jackson Hawes is another interesting case because he went to a team with two good tight ends already: The Buffalo Bills with Dalton Kincaid and Dawson Knox. He plays with good tight ends and he’s in on 35% of the snaps. What could he do with the Rams and bad tight ends?

Similar draft value TEs of recent years​


Are second round tight ends any guarantee to succeed? Obviously not. But let’s look at some who have gone off the board recently in a similar range to Ferguson:

2024 – 53rd overall Ben Sinnott. Things have gotten so bad that Dan Quinn just called a game with 0 catches “his best game” ever.

Dan Quinn on Ben Sinnott: "It was the most he's played and also the best he's played. That's a good sign."

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) September 22, 2025

2023 – 34th overall Sam LaPorta. Great player and he was great immediately when his career started.

2023 – 35th overall Michael Mayer. Replaced by Brock Bowers almost immediately. Mayer’s going to need a change of scenery soon.

2023 – 42nd overall Luke Musgrave. Similar to Mayer, Musgrave found out early that he’s not Tucker Kraft.

2023 – 58th overall Luke Schoonmaker. Has 5 yards this season. Also replaced by a better tight end.

2023 – 61st overall Brenton Strange. Better than the three I just mentioned. Strange had 35 yards as a rookie, but then 411 yards in 2024 and he already has 137 this season. All of his numbers are up this year. Strange could be a beacon of hope for any tight ends out there.

2022 – 55th overall Trey McBride. Here’s another guy who Ferguson fans can look to as a reason not to be worried. McBride was inactive in his first NFL week and he only played 6 snaps in the next two weeks. He had 45 yards in his first 11 games. McBride is now one of the best TEs in the NFL.

2021 – 55th overall Pat Freiermuth. Freiermuth had an impact early in his career with the Steelers and he’s also a better blocking tight end.

Too early to panic, not to soon to be watching​


Clearly we see with Trey McBride that not all great tight end careers are proven in their first three career games! Strange is another player who came along slowly. However, we also see that there are players like Sinnott, Mayer, Musgrave, and Schoonmaker. That’s more than half of the second round tight ends from 2023-2024.

Ferguson is behind many of his rookie counterparts, but it’s a long season and it’s only been three games.

However, if we get to the end of the season and Ferguson has not overtaken at least one tight end — but more optimistically at least two — then we can say that there might be a Hopkins’ a brewin’.

Source: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/los-a...84/rams-rookies-snap-counts-terrance-ferguson
 
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