What does a good offseason feel like for a Rams fan? For a lot of them, it sounds a lot like relief with a side of nerves.
That was the vibe from the responses I got when I asked Rams fans to describe life right now. Some have been around long enough to remember the St.
Louis days. Others came in during the Sean McVay era.
Either way, they’ve seen enough uneven football to know that comfort is not the same thing as certainty.
Still, this is a very different place to be. The Rams are one of only four teams - along with the Chiefs, Eagles and Patriots - to have both won a Super Bowl and played for another within the past eight seasons. Now they’re back in the thick of the offseason conversation, with expectations climbing fast.
One fan, Nancy D., put it this way: “Like eating a hot fudge sundae after coming off a diet!!”
Charles A., who said he’s been a fan since Super Bowl XIV in 1979, called it “A wonderful type of terrifying.” He added: “Last year the Ravens were the best team on paper, and we all know what happened there.
I’ve been a fan since Super Bowl XIV (1979), so I’ve been through decades of losing, but it’s exhilarating to be a fan of a team whose ownership and coaches are always looking to improve even when they already appear to be at the top of the heap. Now let’s get Aaron Donald to unretire …”
Linda A., who spent 35 years as a Raiders fan before marrying into Rams fandom in 2005, drew a pretty vivid contrast. “Being a Raiders fan is like watching your ignorant cousin set fire to your shed every few months and hoping someone talks him into rehab before he burns down the block.
“ Being a Rams fan is like having thoughtful, supportive parents who were homecoming queen and football captain and now work in finance and volunteer for the PTA. Your cousins show up to your birthday parties on time, sober and dressed appropriately.
You have a trust fund, a full refrigerator and a sense of humor. It’s truly glorious.
Therefore, I can sit back and enjoy as the smartest guys in football do what they love.”
Patrick G. framed it like a band that kept changing cities, stumbled through a few rough albums, then suddenly delivered a masterpiece. And if Aaron Donald comes back, he said, it would feel like a reunion tour.
Josie C. compared it to getting the teacher’s pet as a partner for a school project. “You know they’re going to get the job done.”
That confidence has plenty of backing. The Rams have added a future Hall of Fame pass rusher, brought back their MVP quarterback, upgraded their secondary and drafted a potential successor quarterback in the early first round. Multiple reports say Aaron Donald, who is 35, is seriously considering a return, too.
That’s why they’re BetMGM’s Super Bowl betting favorites. It’s also why some league voices are buying in.
One executive told Jeff Howe, “In (the Rams’) minds, they were a 2-point conversion away from winning the Super Bowl. It’s a smart way to build their team.
They’re trying to maximize their roster with an aging QB.”
Another executive went even further: “I think the Myles Garrett trade can put them over the top,” said a second executive. “It gives them the closer on defense that they needed.”
No surprise, then, that the Rams are No. 1 on Mike Jones’ list of offseason winners and losers. The Ravens are there too after landing Trey Hendrickson from a division rival and watching Garrett leave the division, while also adding Jesse Minter, 43, and 30-year-old offensive coordinator Declan Doyle.
The Browns made the winners list as well. Outside the quarterback situation, they’ve got a promising young roster, and if Todd Monken can either revive Deshaun Watson’s career or help Shedeur Sanders develop, they could be in good shape. Early signs, Jones writes, are encouraging.
The Cowboys also earned a spot after giving up a league-high 30.1 points per game and making defense the clear priority. With two first-round picks invested on that side of the ball and George Pickens retained, the early verdict is positive.
The new-look Raiders made the winners list too, and the full rundown of losers is in the story as well. Packers fans, in particular, may not enjoy what they find there.
In Other News...
Rams QB Debate Just Took A Dramatic Turn Around Stafford
Matthew Staffords new extension has put the Rams in a familiar place: building around the quarterback who still gives Sean McVay the best chance to keep the offense steady. The deal keeps Stafford in Los Angeles through at least the upcoming season, and it also narrows whatever immediate questions might have lingered about how the team planned to handle the position after drafting Ty Simpson.
Simpsons arrival still adds a layer to the picture, even if he is expected to open as the third-string quarterback. His long-term role is not settled, which is what makes the depth chart worth watching now, because the Rams have invested in a developmental option while staying committed to Stafford for the present. The only real question is how long that present lasts, and how the team chooses to manage the runway behind its established starter. [Read more 🡒]
Rams May Finally Have What Chris Shula Has Been Missing
The Rams spent the offseason trying to stabilize a secondary that has had to absorb the blow of Jalen Ramseys departure, and the hope is that the new look back end gives defensive coordinator Chris Shula more to work with. Trent McDuffie and Jaylen Watson arrive as the kinds of corners who can help tighten pass coverage, while the broader idea is to build a defense that can make quarterbacks pay for mistakes instead of simply reacting to them.
Kam Kinchens figures to be part of that next step, too, with the staff wanting to free him up to play more downhill and use his ball skills around the line of scrimmage. Shulas defense has already shown a knack for creating turnovers, and with more talent in place this season, the Rams are betting there is still another level to reach if the pieces settle in the right way. [Read more 🡒]
Sean McVay Just Added Intrigue To The Rams Quarterback Debate
The Rams quarterback room already had a fresh layer of intrigue after they used a first-round pick on Ty Simpson, and Sean McVay added to the conversation by making clear the team has not really discussed bringing in another backup. For a club that has spent plenty of time navigating the position under McVay, that alone is enough to keep the depth chart conversation alive as the roster settles in around its newest passer.
McVay did not completely shut the door on another move, though, which is what makes the situation worth watching from here. The Rams have a young quarterback in Simpson and a head coach who is leaving some room for flexibility, while the broader NFC picture keeps shifting around them, from Mac Jones stated commitment in San Francisco to Sam Darnolds post-Super Bowl reflections in Seattle. [Read more 🡒]
