Los Angeles Times

On even footing with Rams

Untested in the NFL, kickers Hajrullahu and MacGinnis will battle rookie Sloman.

- By Gary Klein

Pressure did not bother Lirim Hajrullahu or Austin MacGinnis.

In 2017, with the Canadian Football League’s Grey Cup on the line, Hajrullahu calmly kicked a last-minute field goal to give the Toronto Argonauts the championsh­ip.

During MacGinnis’ junior season at Kentucky in 2016, he kicked game-winning field goals in the final seconds against Mississipp­i State and Louisville.

That kind of poise should serve Hajrullahu and MacGinnis well as they compete with Rams draftee Sam Sloman to replace Greg Zuerlein.

After eight seasons with the Rams, Zuerlein signed as a free agent with the Dallas Cowboys. Les Snead, the Rams’ general manager, said last month that the Rams were looking for a kicker with “superpower­s” to fill the void left by Zuerlein’s departure.

Zuerlein, nicknamed “Lega-Tron,” “Greg the Leg” and “Mr. Automatic,” had 60-yardplus range. He put the Rams in Super Bowl LIII with a 57yard field goal in overtime to defeat the New Orleans Saints in the NFC championsh­ip game, but last season made just 24 of 33 field-goal attempts.

In videoconfe­rences with reporters Wednesday, Hajrullahu and MacGinnis said they welcomed the challenge of a three-man competitio­n that will not be decided until training camp. Hajrullahu and MacGinnis have been participat­ing in the Rams’ virtual offseason program for nearly two weeks. Sloman and other rookies can begin to participat­e next week.

Hajrullahu, a six-year CFL veteran, worked out for the Seattle Seahawks in 2019. MacGinnis played in the defunct Alliance of American Football and the XFL. And Sloman played at Miami of Ohio the last four seasons.

This will be the first time they go to training camp with a real chance to make an NFL team.

“That puts us all in a similar footing,” MacGinnis said, “and the best man will win.”

Hajrullahu, 30, was born in Kosovo but as a child moved with his family to Canada in the wake of war. He attended high school and college in Canada and played for three CFL teams, converting kicks from 50 yards or more in each of his pro seasons. In 2019, he made 47 of 55 field-goal attempts for Hamilton, including one from a career-long 56 yards. He also punts.

With the help of a new agent, he said he decided to pursue his NFL dream.

“I’ve done everything that I need to do up here,” Hajrullahu said from outside Toronto. “I’ve had profession­al experience, I’ve played in big games and I believe I can compete with the best of them.”

MacGinnis, 25, played for Memphis in the AAF in 2018. This spring, he made 10 of 10 field-goal attempts for the Dallas Renegades before the XFL shut down operations.

“Those spring leagues are good because you don’t really have a developmen­tal league in football,” MacGinnis said from Lexington, Ky. “I kind of thought I would sign somewhere, I just didn’t know where.”

The Rams signed Hajrullahu and MacGinnis on April 13. Less than two weeks later, they selected Sloman in the seventh round of the draft.

Rams coach Sean McVay and new special teams coordinato­r John Bonamego will begin to evaluate the kickers when NFL facilities reopen in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The league has mandated that no on-field activity is allowed until all teams receive clearance to do so.

That might mean the kickers will not compete until before the season.

“Just be as ready as possible come training camp,” Hajrullahu said.

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