The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Floyd sets sights on All-Pro honors after staying with Rams

- By Greg Beacham

LOS ANGELES » Leonard Floyd is much more than a pass rusher to the Los Angeles Rams, and that’s why they gave him $64 million to stick around for four more seasons.

The Rams are also much more than a free-agent destinatio­n to Floyd, who is overjoyed he got to stay with a franchise and a head coach that realized his full potential.

Floyd said he’s “still at a loss for words” Thursday when the linebacker thinks about getting his hefty deal with Los Angeles a year after he was unceremoni­ously released by the Chicago Bears. Floyd bet on himself by signing a one-year deal with the Rams last spring — and he cashed in with a 10 1/2-sack season, ninth most in the NFL.

But even with long-term security, Floyd didn’t sound satisfied in a conversati­on from his offseason home, where he plans to skip vacations in favor of workouts and family time for the rest of the offseason.

“I definitely want to keep adding on to my game,”

Floyd said. “I want to make the All-Pro team and things like that. More work to be done. More stuff in the lab.”

Another goal looms even larger.

“My driving motivation is to get the ring, especially after last year,” Floyd said. “I felt like we could have got the ring just off defense alone, and I just feel like if we come back in this year with that focus and that mindset, we can do some big things in LA, and that’s pushing me, man. That’s driving me, wanting to be the best.”

After joining Sean McVay and then-Rams defensive coordinato­r Brandon Staley, Floyd emerged as a versatile all-around contributo­r for the NFL’s No. 1 defense. His performanc­e turned him into a sought-after free agent, but Floyd candidly admits he realized how much of his success was a product of being with the Rams.

“They knew I wasn’t trying to go nowhere else, and that’s all she wrote,” Floyd said. “I wanted to play with AD and Jalen Ramsey. I wanted to run it back. This was the best defense in the league last year, so I want to stick around with the same players and try to do it again.”

Being a teammate of three-time AP Defensive Player of the Year Aaron Donald is a great way to excel, particular­ly as a pass rusher. Floyd capitalize­d on those opportunit­ies as both a successful pursuer of quarterbac­ks and an elite run defender who sets the edge superbly. Floyd also is capable of covering receivers, giving him extraordin­ary value.

“He’s more than just an edge rusher,” Rams general manager Les Snead said last week. “That position evolved last year. Leonard is a special athlete with instincts and the athletic ability to be more than just a disruptor.”

Floyd’s versatilit­y was a key to the Rams’ outstandin­g defensive season, and he sounds optimistic about their chances of maintainin­g that standard amid big offseason changes, including the losses of Staley and four starters.

Safety John Johnson, cornerback Troy Hill, linebacker Samson Ebukam and defensive lineman Morgan Fox left cap-strapped Los Angeles in free agency. The Rams also traded team leader Michael Brockers to Detroit when they couldn’t reach a deal to restructur­e his contract.

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