Cory Littleton was PFF’s highest-graded tackler in the NFL this season

Cory Littleton bet on himself last year and it’s going to pay off big.

Instead of signing Cory Littleton to a long-term contract last offseason, the Rams opted to apply a second-round tender to him. It was a cheap way to keep him around for at least one more year, paying him about $3.1 million for the 2019 season.

Hindsight is always 20/20, but a year later, it looks like the Rams would’ve been better off signing Littleton to an extension rather than a restricted free agent tender.

He bet on himself and proved his worth this season, recording 134 tackles, 3.5 sacks, two interceptions, two forced fumbles and four fumble recoveries. He hardly missed a snap and was a leader in the middle of the Rams defense, a unit that improved significantly against the run over the 2018 season.

With no contract on the books for 2020 and beyond, Littleton will once again be a free agent – this time as an unrestricted one. His breakout season couldn’t have come at a better time, finishing the year as Pro Football Focus’ highest-graded tackler and sixth-best linebacker.

According to Pro Football Reference, Littleton only missed five tackles on 139 attempts. That’s a rate of 3.6%, the lowest of any player with at least 100 tackles.

Littleton’s price tag undoubtedly went up this season and the Rams know it. At the very least, he’ll almost certainly eclipse the contracts signed by Shaq Thompson and Jaylon Smith recently, which were for $13.6 million and $11.4 million per year, respectively.

The Rams must decide if Littleton is worth that cost, because there’s little doubt another team will give him that type of contract. With Dante Fowler Jr. and Michael Brockers also hitting free agency, Los Angeles has a tough call to make.

If Littleton turned down a multi-year extension last year, he was smart to bet on himself. He’s going to be rewarded this offseason, whether it’s by the Rams or someone else.

Jared Goff thanks fans, says Rams will ‘come back better than ever’

Jared Goff posted a photo on Instagram thanking fans and vowing to attack the offseason.

Despite having a roster chock full of talent, the Los Angeles Rams missed the playoffs this season and finished with a mediocre 9-7 record. They came up way short of where they expected to be, which was playing into January (at the very least) and ideally February.

Jared Goff regressed after having a terrific 2018 campaign, leading to constant struggles on offense. Yet, despite the fact that Los Angeles missed the playoffs in its last season at the Coliseum, fans still packed the stadium for home games.

Goff recognized their support and posted a thank you on Instagram Tuesday. He also said the Rams will “attack this offseason and come back better than ever.”

The Rams will move into SoFi Stadium next season, leaving the Coliseum after spending the last four years there. Their new home is expected to be one of the grandest in the entire country, playing host to events such as the Super Bowl, World Cup games and the college football national championship down the line.

Goff and the Rams hope to give fans more to cheer about next season than they did in 2019, but it’ll take a much better effort from the entire team – players and coaches, alike.

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Skip Peete looks like scapegoat for Rams’ rushing struggles in 2019

Skip Peete isn’t returning in 2020, but it shouldn’t be because of the Rams’ struggles on the ground.

For two years, the Los Angeles Rams had one of the best rushing attacks in football – led by none other than Todd Gurley. They were third in rushing in 2018 and eighth the year before, heavily featuring Gurley on offense.

Then came this past season when the Rams effectively abandoned the ground game at times and limited Gurley’s workload for the first half of the season. As a result, the Rams finished 18th in rushing attempts and 26th in rushing yards, averaging only 3.7 yards per carry – 27th in the NFL.

It was a combination of limited opportunities and poor execution, but neither are the fault of running backs coach Skip Peete. He was let go on Monday, being the last remaining holdover from Jeff Fisher’s staff.

Gurley urged the Rams to keep Peete in 2017 when the new regime came in, but three seasons later, Peete is out. It was a shocking move by the Rams, to say the least, given Peete’s success in Los Angeles.

Gurley was the Offensive Player of the Year and a first-team All-Pro in 2017, and an All-Pro again the following season. But now that the Rams moved to a more pass-heavy offense with the running backs featured less, Peete is to blame?

Something doesn’t add up. The running backs coach doesn’t determine how much someone plays or how many carries he gets. The running backs coach’s job is to, well, coach the running backs. It’s up to McVay (and partly the front office) to decide how much Gurley plays. Or how many carries Malcolm Brown and Darrell Henderson Jr. get.

Yes, the Rams’ running backs were ineffective this season – far less productive than they were in 2017 and 2018. But also has to do with teams loading up the box to stop Gurley, and the offensive line being incapable of consistently opening up running lanes. Again, not something Peete can control.

But this is what happens when a team comes up short of expectations and misses the postseason. Wade Phillips wasn’t retained, and Peete is on his way out, too. You could make the case that neither should have been fired, but McVay and the Rams wanted to make changes – and the easiest spots to point to were the defense and the running game.

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Rams letting Wade Phillips go is more about preference than performance

Sean McVay wants to be more involved on defense, and now he can do that with a new defensive coordinator.

On paper, the Los Angeles Rams looked like they had one of the best defenses in football last season. With Jalen Ramsey, Aaron Donald, Dante Fowler Jr. and Cory Littleton leading the way, as well as John Johnson before he got hurt, the Rams were littered with talent on that side of the ball.

Yet, they finished the year 17th in points allowed and 13th in yards. It was an opportunistic defense that forced the ninth-most turnovers in the league, helping to set up the offense with short fields – which it frequently failed to capitalize on.

Inconsistency plagued the defense this season and ultimately may have cost Wade Phillips his job. The Rams announced Monday that Phillips won’t be back as the defensive coordinator in 2020, giving no real reason for the change.

“Coach Wade has been a veteran voice in heading our defense for the past three seasons,” Sean McVay said in a statement. “His wealth of experience, sound advice, and helpful demeanor has been invaluable to our coaches and players, and also has set an example for me as a head coach and a leader of men. I thank Coach Phillips for his numerous contributions to the Los Angeles Rams and our community, and I wish he, his wife Laurie, and the rest of the Phillips family the best.”

McVay clearly wants to go in a different direction, but why exactly is that the case? The defense wasn’t the issue in Los Angeles this season, despite its middle-of-the-road finish in points and yards allowed for the third straight year. It was the offense that regressed significantly, scoring 21 or fewer points in six games.

Yes, the defense had problems of its own – remember the Bucs, Ravens and Cowboys games where the Rams allowed a combined 144 points? – but once Jalen Ramsey and Troy Hill took over as the starting cornerbacks, the unit found its groove.

From Week 7 to Week 14, the Rams only allowed more than 17 points once. Weeks 15-17 were shaky with the Cowboys scoring 44 points, the 49ers scoring 34 and the Cardinals 24, but there was more good than bad with the defense in the second half of the season.

And looking at the numbers from Football Outsiders, the Rams were among the best defenses in the league in 2017 and 2019, according to the site’s DVOA metric. It’s essentially a stat to measure a team’s efficiency on a play-by-play basis compared to league average.

So if it wasn’t a performance issue, why was Phillips let go? It likely has to do with preference – specifically, McVay’s preference.

Hiring Phillips as his first defensive coordinator was a wise move by McVay. It gave the Rams a proven defensive signal caller to handle that side of the ball while McVay found his footing on offense and as a head coach in general. Really, it was one of the smartest moves McVay could have made as a 30-year-old coach.

However, after three seasons at the helm, it seems McVay wants to change things up. He wants to be more involved on defense and put his fingerprints on that side of the ball more. That’s not something he was able to do much with Phillips.

Phillips’ scheme has mostly been the same throughout his coaching career, relying more on personnel and talent than game planning specifically for an opponent. Until Ramsey arrived, the Rams mostly played zone coverage with intermittent blitzing and the same defensive front.

Los Angeles didn’t do much to adapt on a week-to-week basis, which other defenses did to McVay and the offense. Charles Robinson of Yahoo Sports is reporting that McVay wants his defense to be able to do that more, which played into Phillips’ departure.

Now with Phillips out, McVay can handpick his next defensive coordinator. He can find someone who will be more willing to adapt in-game and on a weekly basis, rather than simply playing the same defense in just about every game and leaning on the players to make plays.

Don’t get it twisted: Phillips does a great job getting the most out of his best players, but his scheme has remained almost the same for his entire coaching career.

“We run obviously the 3-4 defense,” Phillips said before the Super Bowl last year. “We were the first team with the Oilers to run a full time 3-4. We’re still running a 3-4 defense. There’s little nuances and things we’ve changed. But the big thing about his defense and our defense all along was try to use the personnel you have to do what they do well.”

Bill Belichick recognized Phillips’ ability to succeed with mostly the same scheme for 30 years, pointing that out before the Patriots beat the Rams in Super Bowl LIII.

“(Phillips has) been successful everywhere he’s been,” Belichick said, via MassLive. “He’s been doing it for 30 years in multiple organizations with multiple groups of players against every kind of offense he could see. I remember dealing with him when I (the head coach) in Cleveland. And to his credit, there’s not many of us that have a system that can last that long.

“I’ve certainly changed a lot in the last 30 years schematically. Wade really hasn’t. He really hasn’t.”

McVay and Phillips had success together and reached the pinnacle of the sport by making it to the Super Bowl a year ago. However, McVay is growing as a coach and wants more control over the defense. He’ll get that if he promotes someone from within such as Joe Barry or Aubrey Pleasant, who he’s worked with since his days with the Redskins.

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Early 7-round mock draft for Rams: Fortifying the trenches in L.A.

In this mock draft, the Rams go all out to fortify the trenches.

The 2020 NFL draft is still more than three months away, but with the Rams in full offseason mode, attention has been turned to the incoming class of prospects. While there’s still a lot to be determined before the Rams go on the clock in late April – like the hiring of a new defensive coordinator, the combine, and free agency – it’s easy to get a sense already of which positions they’ll be looking at.

The defensive front will be a focal point for the Rams this offseason, as will the offensive line. They need help in both areas and depending on what they do in free agency with their limited spending money, it’s likely that their first pick or two will be utilized on the offensive line or front seven.

We cooked up a seven-round mock draft for the Rams to get a feel for which prospects might be available when they go on the clock, beginning with the 52nd overall pick, which is the team’s first selection.

Here’s how the picks shook out, using The Draft Network’s mock draft simulator.

52. Trey Adams, OT, Washington

84. Alton Robinson, EDGE, Syracuse

116. Paddy Fisher, ILB, Northwestern

159. Tommy Kraemer, OG, Notre Dame

179. Jason Strowbridge, DE, North Carolina

211. Jordon Scott, NT, Oregon

Right off the bat, the Rams grab a potential replacement for Andrew Whitworth. Adams has major injury concerns, missing significant time at Washington, but that could benefit the Rams by having him pushed down draft boards. He’s a massive prospect at 6-foot-8, and when healthy, he’s a starting-caliber left tackle.

In the third round, Robinson fills a need at outside linebacker with Dante Fowler Jr. possibly leaving in free agency. He’s an explosive pass rusher who needs refining with his technique, but the potential is there. While in high school, he faced a second-degree robbery charge, which caused Texas A&M to rescind its offer, but he landed with Syracuse and has had a clean record since then. It is a red flag that teams will take into consideration, of course.

In Round 4, the Rams add a physical linebacker who can help either replace Cory Littleton or play alongside him. He’s not the fastest linebacker, but at 6-foot-4 and nearly 250 pounds, he’s able to take on blocks and defend the run. That’s something the Rams need next to Littleton, if he returns.

In the later rounds, the Rams return to the trenches. They add a guard in Kraemer and two defensive linemen with Strowbridge and Scott, bolstering the offensive and defensive line. Kraemer would compete at either guard spot, while Strowbridge could help replace Michael Brockers at defensive end if he departs.

Scott has high upside as a nose tackle, even though the position isn’t a pressing need. Sebastian Joseph-Day and Greg Gaines were fine in 2019, but it never hurts to add some competition.

It might be surprising that we didn’t mock any skill position players to the Rams in this simulation, but the wide receiving corps is deep, the running back room is sufficient if Todd Gurley is back and the tight end room is one of the best in the NFL. Cornerback is also a strength in the short term, as is safety.

Depending on what happens in free agency, the upcoming draft will be mostly about the trenches.

Aaron Donald on Rams’ defensive free agents: ‘They’re guys that we need’

Aaron Donald went to bat for his fellow teammates who will hit free agency in March.

Having one of the best players in the NFL heap praise on you is great. Having him talk you up and vouch for you before hitting free agency is even better.

That’s exactly what Aaron Donald is doing for his teammates who are set to become free agents in March. Having played at least the last year and a half with Cory Littleton, Michael Brockers and Dante Fowler Jr., Donald is familiar with their games.

The Rams certainly won’t be able to keep all three, which will leave at least one gaping hole on the defense’s front seven. Donald would love to see them all return to Los Angeles, saying they’re players that the defense needs.

“I’m gonna try to keep my eye open and do my part if they ask me some questions, hopefully I can help with that. But these are guys that we need back that I feel can help this team to win,” he said last week. “They’re guys that have been productive on this team, helping us get into position to win. Hopefully these guys will be back on our team because I love playing with them. I think they push me, help me to be a better football player and I feel like they’re guys that we need.”

Brockers, Littleton and Fowler all had arguably the best seasons of their career. Littleton led the team in tackles (134), Fowler was second in sacks with 11.5 and Brockers recorded the most tackles in his career (63).

Brockers doesn’t typically put up big numbers, but Donald recognized him as one of the best run stoppers in the league.

“I think he’s one of the best run stoppers in the National Football League,” Donald said. “He’s been that way since I’ve been in the league watching him and playing with him. He don’t got the sack numbers but as far as production when it comes to stopping the run and doing his job, he’s been great at it. He’s one of the main reasons we’re able to do what we can in the run game and do a lot of things just with moving him and putting him in positions to help us.”

Littleton was snubbed for the Pro Bowl and All-Pro teams, but he’s emerged as a top linebacker in the NFL. He’s the only player who had at least 130 tackles, three sacks and two interceptions this season and just the second player since 2016 with those numbers.

Donald said he’s “just a playmaker,” always finding himself near the ball and creating big plays.

“Making a lot of plays, always around the ball, trying to find ways to have the ball in his hands – if it’s just strips to interceptions, and he’s even getting his sack numbers up. So he’s just a guy that’s non-stop around the ball,” he said.

Littleton and Fowler will be especially difficult to replace, which likely makes them the top priorities in free agency. Whether the Rams keep the inside linebacker or the pass rusher will be a huge decision, one that will have a significant impact on the defense.

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Rams part ways with RBs coach Skip Peete

The Rams are moving on from another coach this offseason.

It seems Wade Phillips isn’t the only coach who won’t be back with the Los Angeles Rams in 2020. As first reported by Charles Robinson of Yahoo Sports and confirmed by the Associated Press, the Rams are also parting ways with running backs coach Skip Peete.

This move is just as surprising as Phillips’ departure, but it’s another example of the Rams attempting to hold coaches accountable. Todd Gurley had his worst season since 2016, barely gaining over 1,000 yards from scrimmage with a serious lack of involvement as a receiver.

It’s hard to see how that decline falls on the shoulders of Peete, but Sean McVay is going in a different direction for his running backs coach.

Peete was a holdover from Jeff Fisher’s regime after being hired by the Rams in 2016. He spent the last four years in Los Angeles, helping turn Gurley into one of the top backs in football in 2017 and 2018.

Gurley vouched for Peete in 2017 and lobbied for McVay to keep him aboard.

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7 candidates to replace Wade Phillips as Rams defensive coordinator

Aubrey Pleasant and Joe Barry should be considered the top candidates to replace Wade Phillips.

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The Los Angeles Rams have moved on from Wade Phillips, opting not to retain the defensive coordinator for the 2020 season. It’s a somewhat surprising move, but considering his contract was expiring anyway, it doesn’t come as a complete stunner.

With Phillips out, the Rams now must find his replacement. Other teams across the NFL are also assembling their coaching staffs and looking for replacements of their own, so Los Angeles will need to act fast to get the guy it wants.

Or, the Rams could simply promote from within and elevate a current coach on the staff. Two coaches on McVay’s staff appear to be the lead candidates to replace Phillips, but five other outside coaches could be in the mix, too.

Here are the top seven candidates to become the Rams’ next defensive coordinator.

Joe Barry, Rams LBs coach

Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Barry should be considered one of the frontrunners for the vacancy, given his history with Sean McVay. He worked with McVay in Washington as the defensive coordinator in 2015 and 2016, following the young head coach to Los Angeles as the Rams’ linebackers coach.

Barry also serves as the assistant head coach, which gives him a leg-up on the rest of the competition. He’s helped develop Cory Littleton into one of the best linebackers in football, worked with Dante Fowler Jr. and the Rams’ other young pass rushers and oversaw a Redskins defense that featured Ryan Kerrigan at outside linebacker.

He’s an obvious candidate for the job.

Wade Phillips thanks Rams for last 3 years, says he still wants to coach

Wade Phillips still wants to coach in the NFL and believes he can contribute.

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Wade Phillips is out in Los Angeles after the Rams decided not to extend his contract, which expired after the 2019 season. It’s a big move for Sean McVay and the front office, now needing to find a replacement for Phillips at defensive coordinator.

Phillips spent the last three years with the Rams and helped them reach the Super Bowl after the 2018 season, but Los Angeles never ranked inside the top 10 defensively. It’s hard to blame Phillips for the team’s shortcomings this season, though.

At 72 years old, some believed Phillips might retire from coaching and move on to the next chapter of his life, but that doesn’t seem to be the case. He confirmed the news of his departure from the Rams on Twitter Monday, adding that he still believes he can contribute and coach in the NFL.

Phillips is still one of the better defensive minds in football, frequently helping turn around teams everywhere he went. He’s been a coach in the NFL since 1976 when he was the linebackers coach for the Houston Oilers and has been a defensive coordinator or head coach since 1981.

Twitter reacts to Rams parting ways with Wade Phillips

Wade Phillips won’t be back with the Rams and Twitter was mostly surprised by this decision.

Sean McVay and the Los Angeles Rams made the surprising decision to move on from Wade Phillips as their defensive coordinator. His contract was expiring this offseason and the Rams simply opted not to extend him for next season.

It’s the first major change to McVay’s staff since he joined the Rams in 2017, leaving the young head coach to find a replacement on the defensive side of the ball. This will be an important hire for McVay with so many changes coming to the defense this offseason, needing to find a coach who can capitalize on the talent and handle the turnover.

Twitter was stunned by the Rams’ decision to move on from Phillips, seeing it as a questionable move by McVay. Here’s how fans and media members reacted to the news.