The Rams didn’t bring in a huge rookie class this year, but that doesn’t mean the path to the roster got any easier.
Los Angeles drafted just five rookies, which on paper should ease the pressure of roster math. In reality, the competition is still going to be fierce once training camp opens.
OTAs were only the warm-up. The real fight starts now, when every rep matters and every chance to stand out has to be earned.
That’s the reality for this group. The rookies will have veteran teammates around them to learn from, but the NFL doesn’t hand out spots just because a player was drafted. Even first-year players have to prove they deserve respect, a role, and eventually a place on the roster.
For a team with Super Bowl aspirations, that only makes the challenge steeper. None of the 2026 draft picks are expected to start, and simply getting on the field at all could be a grind on a Rams roster that’s already loaded.
Unlike the veterans, the rookies won’t get many clean opportunities. They’ll have to take whatever reps come their way and make them count.
That’s why the Rams’ preseason plan makes sense, even if it looks a little unusual at first glance. The team is expected to feature rookies and fringe veterans in exhibition games, giving the players fighting for jobs a real chance to show what they can do. If you’re battling for a spot, that spotlight matters.
And the competition is only getting tighter. The 2026 rookies are walking into a roster with plenty of talent already in place, and they’ll be up against returning veterans, last year’s rookies, and new additions all trying to catch the coaches’ attention. Even with some depth concerns at certain positions, the backlog of talent makes this a tough group to crack.
Here’s the bottom line: if all five rookies perform well in camp, they could earn roster spots. But nothing is guaranteed. The Rams don’t operate like teams that automatically reserve a place for draft picks.
In Los Angeles, it’s sink or swim. This rookie class may be facing the toughest odds to make the team since Sean McVay arrived in 2017. When it’s all sorted out, any rookie who survives the cut will have earned it the hard way.
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For Wilson, though, familiarity may not mean identical responsibilities for everyone. The way the Cardinals line up and use condensed splits could ask more of certain receivers in the run game and at the point of attack, which is where the real adjustment may come in. The framework is recognizable, but the distribution of opportunities and duties is still something to watch as LaFleur settles in and figures out who fits where. [Read more 🡒]
