The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Floyd hopes to find own path in Fowler’s footsteps with Rams

- AP Sports Writer

By Greg Beacham

LOS ANGELES (AP) » Although the blueprint drawn by Dante Fowler last season doesn’t precisely fit Leonard Floyd, it’s plenty close enough to thrill Floyd about the chance to turbo-charge his career with the Los Angeles Rams.

In just 1 ½ seasons with the Rams, Fowler transforme­d himself from another team’s underachie­ving top-10 pick into an elite NFL pass rusher who landed a $45 million free-agent contract from Atlanta last month.

Fowler’s pass-rushing replacemen­t in Los Angeles could be Floyd, another top10 pick who hasn’t reached the success and stardom expected of him.

The Chicago Bears released Floyd in March after four seasons of steadily declining pass rush production. He landed a $10 million deal to move to Los Angeles for the chance to maximize his potential by following Fowler’s well-worn path to opposing quarterbac­ks.

“I don’t feel pressure to match (Fowler’s) level,” Floyd said Monday in a video conference call. “I just want to come in and play at my level and try to help the team win games, trying to dominate on defense.”

Fowler and Floyd have similar circumstan­ces in LA, but they’re not the same player. For starters, Floyd is taller and lankier than Fowler, who finally channeled his tremendous physical gifts into a career-high 11 ½ sacks and 16 quarterbac­k hits last season.

Floyd’s own gifts are obvious, but he has been more effective as a run stopper than as a pass rusher. That’s not what the Bears likely expected from the No. 9 overall pick, who had just three sacks and three tackles for loss last season.

“I’m a guy that can do more than one thing on the field,” Floyd said. “I can set the edge in the run. I can drop in coverage, and I’m coming to LA to continue to work on my pass rush, to elevate that even more.”

Floyd’s versatilit­y and eagerness to improve attracted the Rams to take a chance on him. The Rams’ pass rush also took an additional hit when they dropped veteran linebacker Clay Matthews and his eight sacks, leaving

Floyd with ample opportunit­y to play this fall.

They also have inside knowledge of Floyd’s potential from Brandon Staley, his former position coach in Chicago.

Fowler thrived under veteran Rams defensive coordinato­r Wade Phillips, who was subsequent­ly fired by Sean McVay after three straight winning seasons. McVay replaced Phillips with Staley, who has never been an NFL coordinato­r.

But Staley was the Bears’ outside linebacker­s coach in 2017-18, forging a solid bond with Floyd in the process. Staley left Chicago last season to follow Vic Fangio to Denver, and Floyd is confident he already knows his role in the Rams’ new defense.

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