San Diego Union-Tribune

FLOYD COULD MISS SHOWDOWN WITH CARDINALS

- BY GARY KLEIN Klein writes for the L.A. Times.

Their starting quarterbac­k, leading receiver and their most veteran defensive lineman are out of the season finale because of injury or COVID-19 issues.

On Friday, the Rams experience­d more unexpected drama.

Edge rusher Leonard Floyd, who has 91⁄ sacks, did

2 not practice after trainers sent him to the hospital as a precaution because of abdominal pain, a team official said. Floyd will be listed as questionab­le for the game Sunday against the Arizona Cardinals at SoFi Stadium, but he is expected to play, the official said.

The Rams (9-6) can clinch a playoff spot with a victory. They also can make the playoffs if the Bears lose to the Green Bay Packers.

John Wolford will start in place of quarterbac­k Jared Goff, who is recovering from right thumb surgery. Receiver Van Jefferson will start in place of Kupp, and defensive lineman Morgan Fox will start in place of Michael Brockers. Kupp and Brockers this week were placed on the reserve/ COVID-19 list, and coach Sean McVay said Friday that they would not play Sunday. The 6-foot-5, 240-pound Floyd has been one of the most productive players for a Rams defense that ranks first in the NFL in fewest total yards allowed per game and in passing defense. The

Rams are third in rushing defense and scoring defense.

It has been a season of redemption for Floyd.

The Chicago Bears selected him with the ninth pick in the 2016 draft, but the team cut him last March after he performed mostly below expectatio­ns for four seasons. The Rams needed an edge rusher because Dante Fowler had left after a career-best season to sign with the Atlanta Falcons. New Rams defensive coordinato­r Brandon Staley had coached Floyd while a Bears assistant in 2017 and 2018, so the Rams signed Floyd to a one-year, $10-million con

tract that also included millions in incentives.

Floyd said in May he was looking forward to playing alongside star defensive lineman Aaron Donald, a two-time NFL defensive player of the year.

“I know he’s going to be dominating,” Floyd said. “And I’m going to try and get in and dominate right beside him.”

Floyd has taken full advantage of the opportunit­y.

In addition to his base salary, he earned a $1-million bonus when he reached five sacks, and another $1 million for reaching 71⁄ 2, a person with knowledge of the

situation said. He would earn another $1.25 million if he gets at least half-a-sack against the Cardinals to reach 10, the person said.

Floyd had shown promise when he recorded seven sacks for the Bears as a rookie. His sack totals decreased every season thereafter, bottoming out at three in 2019.

But McVay apparently did not put much stock in Floyd’s previous statistics.

“He has been so steady, so consistent, so versatile,” McVay said, adding, “He’s really smart with the different things that he can do. ... He’s been a really underrated player in this league, if

you’re just watching the tape and you see what he does snap in and snap out, instead of just looking at his stat sheet.”

Like Fowler did in 2018 and 2019, Floyd has benefited from playing alongside Donald. The star tackle has 131⁄ sacks, and he is in

2 the running to win the NFL defensive player of the year award for the third time.

But Floyd’s performanc­e, on a team that also includes star cornerback Jalen Ramsey, “stands on it’s own,” Staley said.

“Aaron certainly contribute­s to everybody’s success, all of our success, my success, Jalen Ramsey, all of our success,” Staley said. “But Leonard Floyd, his performanc­e this year on the edge, that stands alone.”

Donald said that Floyd’s ability to work in tandem with other pass rushers has been “huge” for a defense that will try to contain Cardinals quarterbac­k Kyler Murray on Sunday. Floyd might not have a large national profile but opposing offensive coordinato­rs know him well, Donald said.

 ?? JAE C. HONG AP ?? Leonard Floyd is a half-a-sack away from collecting $1.25 million as an incentive.
JAE C. HONG AP Leonard Floyd is a half-a-sack away from collecting $1.25 million as an incentive.

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