Los Angeles Times

Best receivers know Ramsey as shadow

Rams cornerback, who loves a challenge, faces Smith-Schuster Sunday in Pittsburgh.

-

During the Rams’ week off, cornerback Jalen Ramsey perused the Southern California housing market but did not find anything that met his needs.

“Not yet anyway,” Ramsey, acquired in a trade last month, said Friday. “I’m still going through the process right now. Still going through the process of getting in my routine as best as I can.

“I’m having fun. I’m enjoying life.”

One of Ramsey’s favorite activities on the field is shutting down an opponent’s top receiver. He gets another opportunit­y Sunday when he matches up against JuJu Smith-Schuster of the Pittsburgh

Steelers. It will be the third time the young stars will be on the field together, but the first time Ramsey will focus on Smith-Schuster, the former Long Beach Poly High and USC star.

In previous games, when Ramsey played for the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, his assignment was to cover former Steelers star Antonio Brown, regarded as one of the best receivers in NFL history. Ramsey intercepte­d two passes in one game, one in another.

“No disrespect to him,” Ramsey said of SmithSchus­ter, “he’s not Antonio Brown . ... I held my own in those battles and, yeah, now I’m going up against a different person, different body type, different receiver.

“A little big, can make plays. But I play my game. Not really worried about it.”

Ramsey demonstrat­ed why he is considered one of the NFL’s best cornerback­s during his Rams debut

against the Atlanta Falcons. Ramsey mostly neutralize­d star Julio Jones while conducting a running commentary.

He also played well against the winless Cincinnati Bengals.

The matchup against Smith-Schuster would have been a much more difficult assignment if Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger had not suffered an elbow injury in the second game of the season.

Mason Rudolph has been serviceabl­e for a team that rebounded from a 1-4 start to win three games in a row, but he is no Roethlisbe­rger, a sixtime Pro Bowl selection. Smith-Schuster, who will turn 23 on Nov. 22, has made the Steelers look smart for selecting him in the second round of the 2017 draft with the 62nd overall pick. As a rookie, he caught 58 passes for 917 yards and seven touchdowns. Last season, he had a team-best 111 catches for 1,426 yards and seven touchdowns, and was voted to the Pro Bowl.

But when the Steelers traded Brown to the Oakland Raiders, Smith-Schuster no longer had the luxury of playing alongside a Hall of Fame talent. And the injury suffered by Roethlisbe­rger has stunted the Steelers offense.

Smith-Schuster has 33 catches for 459 yards and three touchdowns. On Friday, he popped up on the Steelers injury report as a limited participan­t in practice because of a foot injury. He is listed as questionab­le for Sunday.

If he plays, he will find Ramsey waiting.

“He’s a great player and having an opportunit­y to go against him sharpens my craft and his craft so it will be fun,” Smith-Schuster told Pittsburgh reporters this week. What makes him so good? “His name is Jalen Ramsey, that’s why,” SmithSchus­ter said.

Smith-Schuster worked out for the Rams in Thousand Oaks before the 2017 NFL draft. Coach Sean McVay said this week that Smith-Schuster showed maturity for a player so young. And he said the 6-foot-1, 215-pound SmithSchus­ter

is deceptivel­y fast.

“You feel like, ‘All right, he might not be that burner, but he runs away from everybody,’” McVay said. “He’s got great game speed and it’s really just a challenge for our defense as a whole to know where he is at all times and make sure that he’s accounted for.

“Because as soon as you just slip up a little bit, he makes you pay and makes a big play that ends up changing the narrative of the game.”

Rams cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman left USC for the NFL after the 2012 season. Smith-Schuster arrived at the school in 2014. RobeyColem­an said some observers mistakenly think that SmithSchus­ter is slow. But that is only because he is measured against NFL receivers such as T.Y. Hilton, Tyreek Hill, DeSean Jackson and the Rams’ Brandin Cooks.

“You got people that got jet packs, literally on their back,” Robey-Coleman said. “He’s a fast receiver, and he’s faster when you underestim­ate his speed.”

Ramsey said he was focusing on his own preparatio­n as he continues to get more comfortabl­e in the Rams’ system. But he respects SmithSchus­ter’s skills.

“I like his style of play,” he said. “He plays very physical. He plays strong, aggressive through the catch, so I’ve got to be on my [game] really.

“I look forward to it.”

Etc.

Cooks practiced for the first time since suffering his second concussion of the season on Oct. 27 against the Cincinnati Bengals in London. Cooks traveled to Pittsburgh twice in the last two weeks to meet with a concussion specialist. He will not play Sunday and remains in the concussion protocol. “Part of the advice is just keep a normal rhythm and routine for him, staying active, avoiding some of those collision-type things,” McVay said. “It’s part of the plan to hopefully getting him back on the field.”… Running back Malcolm Brown (ankle) will play Sunday, McVay said . ... Steelers running back James Conner will not play because of a shoulder injury, according to the Steelers injury report.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times By Gary Klein ?? JALEN RAMSEY, in his Rams debut against Julio Jones of Atlanta, has evolved into a shutdown corner.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times By Gary Klein JALEN RAMSEY, in his Rams debut against Julio Jones of Atlanta, has evolved into a shutdown corner.
 ?? Carmen Mandato Getty Images ?? THE FALCONS’ Julio Jones is unable to haul in a catch in front of Jalen Ramsey on Oct. 20 in Atlanta.
Carmen Mandato Getty Images THE FALCONS’ Julio Jones is unable to haul in a catch in front of Jalen Ramsey on Oct. 20 in Atlanta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States