Marin Independent Journal

Rams not certain on future for Goff in LA

- By Greg Beacham

LOS ANGELES » The Los Angeles Rams are openly contemplat­ing the possibilit­y of a near future without quarterbac­k Jared Goff.

General manager Les Snead on Tuesday echoed coach Sean McVay’s pointed uncertaint­y last week about the prospects of Goff, the fifth-year starter and Marin Catholic graduate who led the Rams to the Super Bowl two seasons ago.

The former No. 1 overall draft pick’s four-year, $134 million contract starts next season, but Goff is coming off a second straight underwhelm­ing campaign at the center of the Rams’ offense, which has declined sharply overall since its Super Bowl season.

When asked whether Goff definitely will be with the Rams in 2021, Snead replied: “What I can say is Jared Goff is a Ram in this moment, and it’s way too early to speculate. The future, that’s a beautiful mystery.”

McVay raised eyebrows last week following the Rams’ playoff loss at Green Bay when he said Goff would have to compete for a starting job just like everyone else next season — a noble sentiment, but a practical improbabil­ity for a player with $110 million guaranteed in one of the NFL’s biggest contracts.

McVay and Snead both emphasized they want more out of

Goff, and their public uncertaint­y about the quarterbac­k’s future could be a motivation­al tactic to encourage growth from a player who appears to have stagnated a bit.

Or the Rams seriously could be foreshadow­ing a move on from Goff, even with the calamitous salary cap situation it could create.

“Moving on from Jared Goff, the money we’ve invested in him, that’s not easy to overcome,” Snead said when pressed on whether it was even possible to move a player with Goff’s contract. “But this is a cap-based system . ... Anything can be done in a capbased system. Every team right now that’s over the cap, I bet all those teams figure it out. There’s ways to do it.”

Indeed, Snead has pulled off many remarkable moves against cap constraint­s during his bold tenure with the Rams. Los Angeles cut running back Todd Gurley and traded receiver Brandin Cooks a year ago when both had massive contracts, yet still absorbed the cap hits and fielded a roster that went 10-6 and finished second in the NFC West before beating division winner Seattle in the postseason.

Snead also praised Goff

for his toughness and his overall success under McVay in the past four years, during which only Tom Brady has more than Goff’s 42 victories as a starting quarterbac­k.

“Once we’re refreshed, emotions removed, we’ll sit down and try to figure it out, especially on the offensive side of the ball,” Snead said. “I know Sean wants to get back to being more explosive, scoring more points, not turning the ball over as much. ... There has been success there, and now the goal is to look at the model, see if there’s some tweaks to be made to make sure we get back to who we were, and advance to those next two (playoff) games.”

Goff has been the Rams’ starting quarterbac­k since midway through his rookie season in 2016. He has led

the Rams to four straight winning seasons, three playoff berths and one NFC title during McVay’s tenure.

Yet Goff clearly doesn’t yet rank among the NFL’s top quarterbac­ks by most statistica­l measures, or in the eyes of opponents who often build defensive game plans attempting to force Goff to beat them.

Goff frequently appeared to be a budding star in his first two seasons under McVay when the Rams ranked first (2017) and second (2018) in the NFL in points scored, but he hasn’t built on that success. His 38 turnovers over the past two seasons are the second most in the NFL, and Snead pointed out the Rams’ dissatisfa­ction with those mistakes.

Los Angeles also hasn’t done much to help Goff

from a personnel perspectiv­e. The Rams haven’t added any significan­t offensive skill-position talent in that three-year stretch other than running back Cam Akers, who only contribute­d during an impressive second half of the justcomple­ted season.

Goff passed for 3,952 yards and 20 touchdowns with 13 intercepti­ons and six lost fumbles over 15 games last season.

“There were steps forward, steps back, steps forward again,” Snead said when asked to evaluate Goff’s 2020 season. “It’s a hard position. You’ve got to learn those lessons (and) apply them in real time, which is not the easiest thing to do.”

The Rams have a history of sacrificin­g good in a quest for great: After last season, McVay dismissed defensive coordinato­r Wade Phillips and turned over his defense to rookie coordinato­r Brandon Staley, who promptly turned an above-average defense into the best in the NFL.

“We want to get better,” Snead said. “We want to continue doing things so we can advance to those next two games. We’re in the business of assessing what we’ve done, building a model and then taking action to figure out how we can make the model better. That’s quarterbac­ks, that’s receivers, that’s everyone.”

 ?? MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rams head coach Sean McVay, center, talks to quarterbac­k Jared Goff during the first half of a divisional playoff game against the Green Bay Packers on Jan. 16.
MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rams head coach Sean McVay, center, talks to quarterbac­k Jared Goff during the first half of a divisional playoff game against the Green Bay Packers on Jan. 16.

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