The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Rams focus on restoring stability, developing talent

- By Andrew Knoll

THOUSAND OAKS >> The Rams’ swing from becoming Super Bowl champions to accumulati­ng the most losses ever for defending titlists had all the uppers, downers and all-arounders of a Hunter S. Thompson tale.

So after going from an allin, win-now team brimming with experience to a franchise whose offseason group consists of nearly half rookies, the Rams are, understand­ably, seeking to restore some stability while developing fresh talent.

“A lot of these things that go on out here are to be able to simulate game-like situations, to be able to build those right habits,” coach Sean Mcvay said. “You want to be able to create good stress because that’s where the great growth can come.”

Mcvay said that he and his club were focused on the dayto-day process of improving and maximizing their potential rather than analysts’ prediction­s. That might be a necessary approach, given that the Rams added arguably the least talent in free agency of any NFL team while racking up the second most dead-cap dollars in the league.

They also didn’t have a draft pick in the first round, but were racking up steps on their Fitbits on Days 2 and 3 of the draft, where they made a league-high 14 trips to the podium. Receiver Puka Nacua and defensive lineman Kobe Turner were among the rookies that Mcvay praised for their playmaking ability and preparedne­ss during offseason workouts.

Defensive back Jordan Fuller, 25, suddenly finds himself as one of the most seasoned players on a defense led by future hall of famer Aaron Donald that has no shortage of positional battles ahead.

“I like them as people but, as football players, they ask all the right questions and they’re real, real focused. I’m just excited to see how much they grow and where they can take it,” Fuller said.

He added that the abrupt changes in external expectatio­ns did not have a significan­t impact on the team internally.

“The coaches are still real fun to be around, it’s not like a dreary existence coming into the facility,” Fuller said. “We’re about our work, we’re about our business, but we have fun while we do it, and I like how we do it.”

Day 1 starter?

Offensive guard Steve Avila was the Rams’ first selection, 36th overall, in the 2023 NFL draft and he could push for a starting job on an O-line with more moving parts than stationary components.

Avila is one of four players to have played for TCU, at some point, in the Rams’ crop of rookies. Avila and defensive back Tre’vius Hodges-tomlinson both played at TCU last season, going through an undefeated season under a firstyear coach and ultimately falling 65-7 in the national title game to Georgia and another Rams’ rookie, quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett.

“The TCU team this past year, I felt like we’d been through a lot, especially me and (Hodges-tomlinson), just a bunch of different changes and stuff,” Avila said. “I feel like this is the least amount of stress that we’ve had to deal with over the past couple years.”

Avila described the Rams organizati­on as a “perfect situation” for him given that he had familiar faces, fellow rookies and some strong vets to lean on, such as offensive tackle Rob Havenstein. The spectacula­rly sunny, 72-degree day in the valley didn’t hurt its cause either.

“When you’re in Los Angeles, you can’t really complain about anything,” Avila, a Dallas native, said.

 ?? KYUSUNG GONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rams coach Sean Mcvay runs alongside wide receiver Cooper Kupp during the team’s minicamp Tuesday in Thousand Oaks.
KYUSUNG GONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rams coach Sean Mcvay runs alongside wide receiver Cooper Kupp during the team’s minicamp Tuesday in Thousand Oaks.

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