Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Super Bowl champions ponder what lies ahead

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LOS ANGELES — Sean McVay looked and sounded very much like somebody who had been up all night celebratin­g his first Super Bowl victory when the coach showed up early Monday morning to discuss his Los Angeles Rams’ hometown coronation.

“It’s an incredible honor to be here,” McVay said, his sandpaper rasp accentuati­ng his sarcasm. “It’s also torturous to have a team win a championsh­ip and then make you come the next morning to a press conference this early.”

With the Rams’ 23-20 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals, McVay, 36, has finally reached the culminatio­n of a journey he began in early 2017 as the youngest head coach in modern NFL history. Just over five years later, he became the youngest coach to win a Super Bowl — and the trip left him exhausted, but thrilled.

McVay said nothing Monday about the possibilit­y of walking away from football soon, as the burnout-prone coach has suggested when asked about it over the years. But he didn’t sound like he was finished with his work on a team he built into a champion.

“I’ve been surrounded by great people,” McVay said. “When you get around great players, great coaches that are all committed and working in the same direction, pulling that rope in the same direction, good things can happen. When you have the right foundation­al pieces … because of those guys’ success, other people get opportunit­ies to grow.”

Aaron Donald also hit his career’s peak by making the decisive defensive play on Cincinnati’s final snap, harassing Joe Burrow into a fourth-down incompleti­on

to finish a Super Bowl performanc­e that included two sacks. The three-time AP Defensive Player of the Year finally has his first ring — and the 30-year-old star also sidesteppe­d questions about early retirement immediatel­y after the victory.

Rams Chief Operating Officer Kevin Demoff said the team will wait until its celebratio­ns die down to figure out how serious McVay and Donald are about starting life after football, but he is optimistic they’ll both be back.

“I think all of these guys are wiped,” Demoff said. “When you get to this point, the gas tank is empty and you’re sitting there holding a trophy. I think that’s daunting to some degree when you wake up this morning and realize you’ve got to go do it all over again, and you don’t have the energy. So I think the talk is actually natural.

“And I would agree. I don’t think Sean’s current pace is sustainabl­e in terms of how much work he puts in if you want to have a family. But I think the one thing, these guys all love football. They love being around each other. … These are all natural questions that are hard to answer in the moment. A month away, two months away from everybody, and I think things will feel a lot better.”

Not even a Super Bowl championsh­ip affected Rams owner Stan Kroenke’s career-long reluctance to speak publicly about his many sports teams, but Demoff said the billionair­e who built SoFi Stadium was “happier than I’ve ever seen him” after raising his first Lombardi Trophy.

“He took the two biggest risks in the NFL that I can think of in the last decade,” Demoff said. “Buying land to build a stadium, hoping to get the opportunit­y to become the Los Angeles Rams again, and hiring a 30-year-old head coach when everybody wanted a major name. Those two risks culminated last night with unbelievab­le reward.”

The Rams have done everything big since Kroenke relocated them to Los Angeles from his native Missouri six years ago. Landing in a glamorous town that had largely forgotten them, the Rams got everybody’s attention again by developing an appetite for risks and stocking their roster with veteran stars.

Many of those stars played key roles in the Rams’ 16th and final victory. From Donald and Von Miller to Matthew Stafford and Super Bowl MVP Cooper Kupp, Los Angeles’ big names loomed large in the grand finale.

“There were so many guys on this team that have just respected this game, have put in the work and the time,” said Kupp, who looked less annoyed than his boss to be awake shortly after sunrise. “That was a huge thing coming into this. So many guys just said, ‘Hey, we’ve got guys here that deserve a Super Bowl. We’ve got to win this for them.’”

It happened one last time in the Super Bowl when Cincinnati scored 17 consecutiv­e points to take a 20-13 lead several minutes into the third quarter. The Rams’ offense managed three points from seven consecutiv­e possession­s before its final drive — a 15-play, 79yard imperfect masterpiec­e ending in Kupp’s 1-yard TD catch.

“We talk a lot about just being able to do your job,” Kupp said. “We went through a little bit of a lull there leading into halftime and through that third quarter. We just needed to keep pushing and keep trusting in the details of things.”

 ?? (AP/Matt Rourke) ?? los Angeles Rams defensive end Aaron donald (left) forces Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow to throw an incomplete pass on fourth down during the second half of Super Bowl LVI on Sunday in Inglewood, Calif. Donald earned his first Super Bowl ring as the Rams beat the Bengals 23-20.
(AP/Matt Rourke) los Angeles Rams defensive end Aaron donald (left) forces Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow to throw an incomplete pass on fourth down during the second half of Super Bowl LVI on Sunday in Inglewood, Calif. Donald earned his first Super Bowl ring as the Rams beat the Bengals 23-20.
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McVay
 ?? (AP/Mark J. Terrill) ?? Los Angeles Rams offensive tackle Andrew Whitworth holds up the Lombardi Trophy after the Rams defeated the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI on Sunday in Inglewood, Calif. Whitworth is the first offensive lineman in his 40’s to play in the Super Bowl.
(AP/Mark J. Terrill) Los Angeles Rams offensive tackle Andrew Whitworth holds up the Lombardi Trophy after the Rams defeated the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI on Sunday in Inglewood, Calif. Whitworth is the first offensive lineman in his 40’s to play in the Super Bowl.

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