Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Rams reach Seminole moment of rebuild

After drafting Verse in first, they pick Florida State linemate Fiske in second to aid defense.

- BY GARY KLEIN

As he settled in for an introducto­ry news conference Friday, it was difficult to ascertain what new Rams edge rusher Jared Verse was more excited about:

His selection the night before with the 19th pick in the NFL draft? Or that moments earlier on Friday, the Rams had traded up to select former Florida State teammate Braden Fiske?

Verse had traveled to Southern California and, upon arrival at the Rams’ draft house in Hermosa Beach, he was ushered into a room for a phone call with Fiske after general manager Les Snead selected the defensive tackle in the second round with the 39th pick.

“Having him be out here with me, and me being out here with him is just out of this world,” Verse said.

The 6-foot-4, 254-pound Verse was the first player chosen by the Rams in the first round since 2016.

“It’s on me now,” he said. “I’ve got to show it was worth it.”

Along with Verse and Fiske, the Rams also chose Michigan running back Blake Corum in the third round with the 83rd pick and Miami safety Kamren Kinchens with the 99th pick.

“Their makeup is unbelievab­le in terms of the intangible­s, the mental toughness,” coach Sean McVay said. “These guys all have a physicalit­y to their game.”

Verse, who had nine sacks in each of his last two college seasons, said he admired accomplish­ed NFL pass rushers such as Jadeveon Clowney, Myles Garrett and Maxx Crosby. The Rams drafted Verse and Fiske to help fill the void left by another star, recently retired Aaron Donald, a threetime defensive player of the year.

Verse said Thursday he welcomed the pressure of helping to replace Donald, a certain first-ballot Hall of Famer. On Friday, Verse indicated he was looking forward to making his own name.

“Those are big shoes to fill,” he said. “I have my own set of shoes though. I have my own things I have to do.

“I’m a whole different player than he is, and I want to have the impact that he has on the game. But day by day, I’m working just to become the best me.”

The Rams began Friday with the 52nd, 83rd and 99th picks. Early in the second round, however, the Rams made a deal to move up to No. 39. They sent Nos. 52 and 155 and a second-round pick in 2025 to the Carolina Panthers so they could draft Fiske.

“I don’t take that for granted, you know, seeing a team trading up to get you,” Fiske said during a videoconfe­rence. “That means they really want you and they saw something in you from the beginning and they want to come get you.

“I’m going to give it in return. I’m going to give everything I’ve got.”

As with Verse, who transferre­d to Florida State after playing two seasons at Albany, the 6-4, 292-pound Fiske also began his career at a smaller school. He joined the Seminoles after five years at Western Michigan.

The two bonded during their only season in Tallahasse­e, Fla., pushing each other to achieve their goals.

“I’ve never in my life met somebody who works harder, or like just as hard as me, until I met Fiske,” Verse said. “This guy’s in the training room, he’s in there an hour before me. I’m in the weight room, he comes in five minutes later, and I’ve got to extend my workout because I can’t let him be in there longer than me. He’s on the field, we’re trying to compete in everything we do.

“It’s just been a competitio­n every day, and we just bonded over how bad we want it.”

Said Fiske: “From day one, he was somebody I knew right away that this is the guy I’m going to be around because I can see the way he works and the way he gets after it. Really similar to who I am. Almost identical.”

Verse and Fiske said they also were in sync on the field and had gotten to the point where a nod or a look was all that was needed to communicat­e a strategy for a play.

“We talked about, imagine if we went to the same team, that would be so cool if that would happen,” Verse said. “So it’s kind of like full circle. We just have that connection and now we’re bringing it to the NFL together.

“It’s going to be bad for opposing offenses.”

As with Verse, Fiske said he was looking forward to playing with Rams secondyear tackle Kobie Turner, a finalist last season for defensive rookie of the year.

Fiske also anticipate­s he and Verse will continue to improve as they play together.

“Me and him just have a different chemistry that we just built in one year,” Fiske said. “I can imagine what we can build in three, four, five or even longer.”

Corum rushed for 27 touchdowns while starring for a Michigan team that won the College Football Playoff championsh­ip.

Rams running back Kyren Williams establishe­d himself as a 1,000-yard rusher last season. Corum is looking forward to complement­ing Williams.

“I know he’s going to help me get better,” Corum said during a videoconfe­rence. “I’m going to push him to be the best version of himself. And it’s going to be a great tandem, great duo.”

Kinchens joins a safety group that includes Quentin Lake, Russ Yeast and Kam Curl.

“You see the toughness, the range, being able to play, really, sideline to sideline,” McVay said. “His deep defense feel, you can see at the point of contact there’s no flinch.”

 ?? ERIK VERDUZCO Associated Press ?? BRADEN FISKE says he and Jared Verse developed a special rapport at Florida State: “Me and him just have a different chemistry that we just built in one year.”
ERIK VERDUZCO Associated Press BRADEN FISKE says he and Jared Verse developed a special rapport at Florida State: “Me and him just have a different chemistry that we just built in one year.”

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