Rams activate Kyren Williams, Jason Taylor II from injured reserve

The Rams have officially activated Kyren Williams and Jason Taylor II from injured reserve for Week 12 vs. Cardinals.

The Los Angeles Rams are set to face the Arizona Cardinals for the second time this season in Week 12, and they’ll have a couple of players getting healthy. Ahead of Sunday’s matchup with the Cardinals, the Rams have activated Kyren Williams and Jason Taylor II from injured reserve.

In a corresponding move, the Rams also waived offensive tackle Zachary Thomas. Thomas has been active in two games this season for the Rams.

The return of Williams is a welcomed sight for the Rams as they struggled to generate consistent yards on the ground during his four-game absence. Williams rushed for a career-best 158 yards and a score in the last game he was active in, which was in Week 6 versus the Cardinals.

The second-year back sustained a sprained ankle in the first meeting against the Cardinals, landing him on injured reserve. Darrell Henderson Jr. and Royce Freeman split the backfield workload during his stint on injured reserve.

After selecting him in the seventh round of the 2023 NFL draft, Taylor was active in the season opener against the Seattle Seahawks. The rookie defensive back would suffer a groin injury that would sideline him until this week.

With Quentin Lake ruled out for Sunday’s divisional matchup, Taylor could provide depth at safety behind John Johnson III, Jordan Fuller, and Russ Yeast, along with contributing on special teams. At the same time, the offense receives a massive boost with the return of Williams.

Rams designate Kyren Williams, Jason Taylor II to return from IR

In addition to Kyren Williams, the Rams also designated Jason Taylor II to return from injured reserve

More reinforcements are on the way for the Los Angeles Rams this week. After getting back Matthew Stafford, Ernest Jones, Rob Havenstein and Bobby Brown III last week, the Rams have now designated Kyren Williams and Jason Taylor II to return from injured reserve.

That makes them eligible to practice immediately and the expectation is that Williams will play this Sunday against the Cardinals. Taylor’s status remains up in the air, but the Rams now have 21 days to activate him from IR.

Williams has been out since injuring his ankle in the Rams’ Week 6 win over the Cardinals, missing the last four games. He’ll take over as the starting running back again, with Royce Freeman and Zach Evans backing him up.

Taylor has been on injured reserve since the start of the season due to a groin injury, so he’s yet to play a game in the NFL.

Rams place rookie safety Jason Taylor II on injured reserve

The Rams have placed rookie safety Jason Taylor II on injured reserve because of a groin injury.

Jason Taylor II made his debut with the Los Angeles Rams in Week 1 versus the Seattle Seahawks, but he’ll be sidelined for Sunday’s game against the San Francisco 49ers. On Friday, the Rams placed Taylor on the team’s injured reserve list ahead of Week 2.

The rookie safety picked up the groin injury while contributing on special teams in the Week 1 win over the Seahawks. Taylor logged 16 total snaps on Sunday against the Seahawks and all of those came on special teams.

The Rams spent a seventh-round pick on Taylor in this year’s draft to give them more depth at the safety position. But after bringing back veteran John Johnson III, Taylor’s role was shifted to special teams, barring an injury.

Throughout the week, the first-year safety was limited in practice due to his groin injury. With Taylor headed to injured reserve, he’ll miss a minimum of four games for the Rams.

How John Johnson’s return affects the Rams’ depth chart at safety

With John Johnson returning to the Rams, it shakes up the depth chart at safety ahead of the 2023 season

The Los Angeles Rams are reuniting with John Johnson, agreeing to a one-year deal with the veteran safety. Johnson’s return alters the outlook of the secondary and it will undoubtedly affect how the depth chart shakes out ahead of Week 1.

Prior to a two-year stint with the Cleveland Browns in 2021 and 2022, Johnson was with the Rams from 2017 to 2020. Johnson quickly became a starter when he joined the Rams in 2017 and became a defensive captain rather quickly, producing 32 pass breakups and eight interceptions in his four years in Los Angeles.

Before Johnson reunited with the Rams, the starting safeties for the 2023 campaign were expected to be Jordan Fuller and either Quentin Lake or Russ Yeast. Fuller was listed as the starting strong safety, while Yeast and Fuller were battling to be the starting free safety.

Considering his previous experience with the Rams, and the fact he’s still a productive safety at only 27 years old, Johnson figures to slide in as the starting free safety this season. That means that guys like Yeast, Lake, and Jason Taylor II will be relegated to reserve or special teams roles to begin the upcoming season.

At the moment, the Rams may not have confidence in either Yeast or Lake making the leap to full-time starter yet. While Johnson’s presence will almost certainly prevent him from starting, Lake has been moving around the defense throughout training camp, even playing dime linebacker in practice.

Besides Yeast and Lake seeing their chances of starting decline, the odds of undrafted rookies Quindell Johnson and Tanner Ingle making the roster have also taken a hit. The same goes for Richard LeCounte III. The five safeties that are expected to remain on the roster are now Johnson, Fuller, Yeast, Lake, and Taylor.

It’s highly improbable that the Rams consider keeping six or more safeties on the 53-man roster, which means that Johnson, Ingle and LeCounte’s best chance to remain in Los Angeles is via the practice squad. Along with bringing experience and production to the secondary, Johnson’s return to the Rams will make it interesting when the team needs to decide their depth chart at the safety position.

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2023 Season Preview: Could 2023 be the last Bedlam matchup?

What is Oklahoma State bringing back for what could be the last Bedlam matchup for the foreseeable future?

In our next opponent preview, we take a look at the Oklahoma State Cowboys.

The Cowboys are coming off a 7-6 season and are replacing a ton of talent, especially defensively.

The Cowboys have 57% of their production returning from a year ago, which ranks 89th per ESPN’ returning production metric (ESPN+).

They return 65% of their offense which ranks 66th in the nation, and 50% of their defense, which ranks 101st.

The big loss offensively is quarterback [autotag]Spencer Sanders[/autotag]. When healthy, he was their offense last year. He threw for 2,642 yards, 17 touchdowns and nine interceptions. He also ran for 391 yards and eight touchdowns.

It’s no secret that when he wasn’t 100%, the offense struggled mightily and ultimately, the team suffered. They will look to replace him with transfer and former Texas Tech quarterback Alan Bowman or with Garret Rangel. Rangle saw some action last year in place of Sanders.

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The offensive line has been a major issue for several years. They finished 97th in the nation in rushing last year and, averaged just 3.43 yards per carry.

The offense finished 52nd in total offense and is expected to change up its philosophy by operating from under the center more.

This points to Alan Bowman getting the nod with his experience in an offense that goes under center a lot of the time in the Michigan Wolverines. But he hasn’t played in two years after he was a backup for the Wolverines.

Their top two rushers in, Dominic Richardson and Sanders, both transferred out, so they’ll have to replace that production. Cowboys fans have high hopes for Ollie Gordon.

Gordon showed flashes last year but only ran for 308 yards and two touchdowns.

They do return their top wide receiver Brennan Presley, who had 813 yards but only two touchdowns. However, they lose their next five leading receivers from a year ago.

Defensively they finished 115th in the nation in total defense a year ago. The Cowboys have to replace seven starters, including their top two tacklers Jason Taylor II and Mason Cobb.

They lost eight of their top 10 players in tackles and five of their top seven in sacks.

They are moving to a new defensive scheme under new defensive coordinator Bryan Nardo. Unlike Derek Mason and Jim Knowles before him, who ran mostly a 4-2-5 defense, Nardo runs a 3-3-5 defense.

This means Collin Oliver will be moving to linebacker for the Pokes. Head Coach Mike Gundy did mention at Big 12 Media Days he wants the defense to be multiple and run some four-man fronts as well. I’d expect that means Oliver will still line up on the edge plenty.

Oklahoma State is such a hard team to try to predict. If you look at everything they lost and the state of the program, this looks like an average football team, at best

But Gundy usually does his best when there aren’t a ton of expectations. See 2021, where a lot of people picked the Cowboys to finish in the bottom half of the conference standings.

As we sit here today, this is a game Oklahoma should win. However, with it being the last Bedlam for the foreseeable future, and in Stillwater, there would be nothing sweeter for the Cowboys to play spoiler.

Score Prediction: 41-13 Oklahoma

Predicted Record: 8-1

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Watch highlights of Jason Taylor II, the Rams’ 7th-round safety

Jason Taylor II was a seventh-round pick but he was a playmaker for the Cowboys at Oklahoma State

The Los Angeles Rams finally addressed their need at safety in the seventh round of the draft by selecting Jason Taylor II out of Oklahoma State. Seventh-round rookies aren’t expected to make much noise initially, but Taylor was given a fourth-round grade at NFL.com and was a playmaker for the Cowboys.

He can line up in the slot, in the box or as a deep safety, which gives the Rams plenty of options with their rookie defensive back in the secondary.

Last season alone, Taylor had six interceptions, a forced fumble and 99 total tackles, adding 3.5 tackles for a loss as the cherry on top of what was a fantastic finish to his college career. It’s easy to like his game when watching the film, seeing a player who can contribute at multiple spots with good range and ball skills.

Check out highlights from his senior season at Oklahoma State.

One under-the-radar player to watch from the NFL draft’s six weakest position groups

We’re looking at one under-the-radar player to watch from the 2023 NFL draft’s six weakest position groups

This year’s NFL draft class offers high-end talent, but some positions offer more talent than others, including a tight-end group that could become one of the best we’ve seen in a long time.

That’s not an early-round need for Philadelphia; while edge rusher and cornerback offer the most depth, it’s not an overall deep draft, and GM Howie Roseman will likely look for elite talent in the first 100 picks.

With the selection process just one week away from today, here’s one under-the-radar prospect to watch from the draft’s six weakest position groups.

Saints to host Oklahoma State safety Jason Taylor II on pre-draft visit

The Saints plan to host Oklahoma State safety Jason Taylor II on a pre-draft visit, meeting with one of this year’s top ballhawks:

This is interesting. The New Orleans Saints plan to host Oklahoma State safety Jason Taylor II on a visit ahead of the 2023 NFL draft, per KPRC 2 Houston’s Aaron Wilson. Taylor led the Big 12 in interceptions (6) last season and is one of college football’s best ballhawks, with 19 career passes defensed the last two years. He’s started 27 of the 54 games he played in college, including 26 of his last 27 appearances.

He also nails the physical prototype the Saints value at defensive back, carrying his 204 pounds well with a 5-foot-11.5 and 32-inch arms (for a 78.2-inch wingspan). He moves really well and plays smart football, and didn’t draw a single penalty flag on 2,496 career snaps on both defense and special teams, where he ran with five of the six kicking units. Missed tackles were an issue for him but he’s aggressive in run defense, and that’s something the Saints can work on with him.

Taylor looks like an ideal third-day pick between rounds four and seven. He’ll make an immediate impact on special teams while offering depth at safety. He’s played all over the field for the Cowboys with 400-plus snaps in the slot to boot. Between his college experience, playmaking ability, and Relative Athletic Score (8.9), he looks the part of a Saints draft pick. We’ll see where he ends up.

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Chiefs to hold pre-draft meeting with Oklahoma State S Jason Taylor II

The #Chiefs are set to have a pre-draft meeting with a ball-hawking Big 12 safety, per report.

The Kansas City Chiefs are set to meet with a ballhawk at the safety position ahead of the 2023 NFL draft.

According to KPRC2 NFL reporter Aaron Wilson, the Chiefs are scheduled to meet with Oklahoma State S Jason Taylor II sometime soon. It’s unclear whether this is a top-30 visit, a private workout or otherwise, but this prospect is receiving quite a bit of interest around the league. Wilson reports that Taylor visited the Jets, has an upcoming visit with the Saints and has already met with the Texans, Raiders and Eagles.

Taylor was the Big 12’s leader in interceptions (6) this past season, only one shy of matching the FBS lead last season. Listed at 5-foot-11 and 208 pounds, Taylor was a two-year starter for the Cowboys, becoming a cornerstone in the defensive secondary. He was highly productive during that span with eight total interceptions and 11 passes defended.

Taylor has the versatility to play single-high, two-deep, or roll down into the box and play closer to the line of scrimmage. He is also a stud special teams player, boasting over 400 multi-phase special teams snaps throughout his college career, which would certainly appeal to a team like Kansas City.

It might look like the safety room is rather full for the Chiefs with the addition of Mike Edwards and re-signing of Deon Bush, but competitive depth is important. It’s not just about creating a competitive environment for the upcoming NFL season, but also for the future.

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Eagles hosted Oklahoma State safety Jason Taylor II on a top 30 pre-draft visit

With the NFL Draft fast approaching, the Philadelphia Eagles met with Oklahoma State safety Jason Taylor II on a top-30 visit

The Eagles added two safeties during the first wave of free agency but could look to add a top prospect via the NFL draft.

With the top 30 visit process ending, Philadelphia is set to meet with Oklahoma State safety Jason Taylor II at the NovaCare Complex.

Taylor spent most of his time at Oklahoma State lined up either in the box or as a traditional free safety, precisely where the Eagles need help.

A willing tackler with excellent ball skills, Taylor had six interceptions and four pass breakups in 2022, with a completion rate of only 54%.

Taylor offers upside and brings intangibles after logging over 500 career special teams snaps in the Big 12.

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