Top draft pick Goff leads Rams rookies into camp
owed the rookies’ every move, and they’ll do the same to the veterans on Thursday.
Keeping expectations at a manageable level will be a major task for coach Jeff Fisher and the Rams, who don’t want their prize passer to carry any more burdens than the expectations and responsibilities already heaped on his shoulders. The Rams say they won’t be concerned whether Goff or Keenum starts their season opener at San Francisco in early September.
“We’re going to coach (Goff) to be successful, and we’re not going to put him in with a chance to fail,” Fisher said last month after the Rams’ final practice. “That’s the most important thing in developing a young quarterback.”
Goff has several weeks and four preseason games to get ready, and he’ll have plenty of help from the youngsters making the journey with him.
When Cooper rolled up to campus in a new Porsche with cameras following his every move, his fancy wheels and broad grin couldn’t hide his level of excited anxiety about the weeks ahead.
“About a 10 out of 10,” Cooper said to describe his level of nervousness.
The Rams eased into their first offseason back in California by spending the past six months headquartered at a fully functional training complex in coastal Oxnard.
That complex is the Dallas Cowboys’ annual home for training camp, so the Rams had to pack up and move more than 100 miles southeast to Orange County for their own camp.