Rams May Have Finally Put Emmanuel Forbes In The Right Spot

With a revamped strategy, the Rams are poised to maximize Emmanuel Forbes' playmaking prowess while mitigating his previous vulnerabilities on the field.

The Rams spent last season leaning on Emmanuel Forbes Jr. far more than they planned to, and it showed in all the messy ways a cornerback can be stretched too thin. Injuries tore through the secondary, forcing Forbes into a career-high 14 starts in the regular season and one more in the playoffs.

He answered with the kind of aggressive, ball-hawking play that keeps a defense alive - three interceptions and a forced fumble - but the tradeoff was obvious. The same edge that made him dangerous also led to missed tackles and coverage breakdowns.

That’s the part Los Angeles believes it can clean up this year.

With Trent McDuffie and Jaylen Watson set as the primary outside corners, Forbes no longer has to carry the kind of burden that exposed him last season. Instead of being asked to hold up as a full-time main cover man, he can be used more like a disruptive piece who attacks the football and works in tighter spots. That shift should let the Rams tap into what he does best without asking him to survive in situations that have already caused problems.

Forbes has shown he can create chaos. He tied for the team lead in interceptions and easily led Rams defensive backs with 18 passes defensed.

The Rams can now move him around more freely, lining him up in the slot or in the middle of the field with a stronger safety group behind him if a play gets past the first layer. When McDuffie slides inside - and the new Rams CB1 is versatile enough to move all over - Forbes can kick outside and handle lesser receivers instead of chasing the top target every week.

That kind of setup matters because the rough spots were real. Forbes had a 21.2 percent missed tackle rate last season, according to Pro Football Reference, and owns a 20.2 percent career mark.

PFF charged him with 16 whiffs on the year, which ranked third-worst among 114 qualified corners. He also allowed 15.3 yards per catch, seventh-most in that group, and gave up six touchdowns on 84 targets, including the playoffs.

The upside is still there, though, and the Rams are clearly banking on it. PFF had Forbes second with 13 pass breakups, a sign that he can still disrupt routes and finish plays when he’s put in the right spots. With Quentin Lake, Kam Curl, and Kamren Kinchens behind him, and McDuffie and Watson taking on the toughest assignments, Forbes has the support structure he didn’t always have a year ago.

Now the Rams are asking him to turn that support into production.

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