Los Angeles Times

Austin pushing toward opener

- By Gary Klein gary.klein@latimes.com Twitter: @latimeskle­in

players stopped to greet Tavon Austin before Monday’s workout as the receiver stretched on the field.

Running back Todd Gurley strolled up and offered a hug. Coach Sean McVay patted Austin on the top of his helmet.

Then it was time to finally practice.

For the first time since suffering a hamstring injury on the fourth day of training camp, Austin participat­ed in individual drills.

Austin will not play in Thursday night’s preseason finale at Green Bay but is working toward being available for the Sept. 10 regularsea­son opener against the Indianapol­is Colts.

“It makes you cherish it more, I can say that,” he said after the workout. “Just being out there with the fellas.”

Before last season, the Rams signed Austin to a four-year, $42-million-extension, a deal that produced minor shock waves through the NFL. Austin went on to catch 58 passes for 509 yards and three touchdowns.

Austin’s role in McVay’s offense was already in question because of a wrist injury that required surgery and prevented him from participat­ing in offseason workouts and minicamps. The hamstring injury added more uncertaint­y.

The Rams this month traded for Sammy Watkins, a receiver with proven deepthreat capability. The move appeared to signal that Austin would not get the opseason portunity to prove himself as a vertical threat.

“To be honest, it’s competitio­n,” Austin said of the Watkins acquisitio­n, adding, “Since the new coaches have got here I only have four days in this offense, so I understand.”

Austin said that coaches still have plans for him in the offense.

He has caught 181 passes in his career, 12 for touchdowns, and has rushed for 968 yards and eight touchdowns in 128 carries. He also has returned punts.

“Wherever I land, I know myself,” he said. “I know what I’m capable of and I know the things I can do on the field will definitely still help this team.”

McVay sounded confident that Austin would be ready for the opener — “He’ll be in great shape to be ready to roll for that Indy game,” he said — but Austin said he was “still day-to-day based.”

McVay declined to specify how the Rams might deploy the 5-foot-8, 179-pound Austin. He did add some spin, though, saying that Austin’s absence from preRams games could work to the Rams’ advantage because opponents won’t know how the Rams plan to use him.

“We’re still figuring that out as a staff,” McVay said. “But one thing that we do know is, he’s a special player and we’ve got to find a way to get him touches.”

The Rams receivers group includes Austin, Watkins, Robert Woods, rookies Cooper Kupp and Josh Reynolds and secondyear pros Pharoh Cooper and Mike Thomas among others.

Austin, the eighth player selected in the 2013 draft, said this was the best and most versatile group of receivers the Rams have had during his career.

“A couple years we’ve been here we only had two or three guys that [opponents] would be looking at,” he said. “Now they’ve got to defend the whole field.”

Austin will go into the season without having run a play in McVay’s offense during a game.

But he has observed some that fit his skill set.

“It’s all about coach McVay and his staff,” he said. “Wherever they need me to play, I just need the ball in my hands eventually.”

Etc.

The Rams announced that Hall of Fame running back Eric Dickerson, 56, would sign a one-day contract Tuesday and retire as a Ram. Dickerson, the Rams’ first-round pick in the 1983 draft, played his first fourplus NFL seasons with the club before he was traded to the Colts. He also played for the Los Angeles Raiders and Atlanta Falcons during an 11year career that ended in 1993. Last season, while working as a radio personalit­y, Dickerson was critical of the team. He feuded with then-coach Jeff Fisher after Fisher refused to provide him with extra sideline passes and followed up on a pledge not to attend Rams games as long as Fisher was the coach. Dickerson returned to the Coliseum sideline after Fisher was fired.

 ?? Jae C. Hong Associated Press ?? TAVON AUSTIN, back at practice Monday after recovering from a hamstring injury, caught 58 passes for 509 yards and three touchdowns last season.
Jae C. Hong Associated Press TAVON AUSTIN, back at practice Monday after recovering from a hamstring injury, caught 58 passes for 509 yards and three touchdowns last season.

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