Will Rams RB Kyren Williams pick up where he left off?

Will the 2023 breakout back repeat his success in the upcoming season?

Los Angeles Rams running back Kyren Williams was a breakout star last season as he quickly supplanted former starter Cam Akers and the stage was set for a huge season.

After a rookie season in which he had just 35 carries for 139 yards in 10 games. At best, he was viewed as a handcuff for Akers — until a strong training camp led to Williams winning the starting job and never looking back. In 12 games, he had 228 carries for 1,144 yards, caught 32 passes for 2016 yards, and scored 15 touchdowns. He had 20 or more carries in seven of his final nine games, which was unsurprising given head coach Sean McVay’s history.

McVay has consistently leaned on a lone back to have more than 15 carries a game – and often more than 20. It started with Todd Gurley and transferred to C.J. Anderson, Sony Michel and Akers. Williams earned his turn last season and averaged 19 carries a game.

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The critical factor is that McVay has always had someone waiting in the wings to replace the starter if he fell to injury or was ineffective. This year is no different. Despite Williams’ monster 2023 season, the Rams created a succession plan in the draft, using a third-round pick on Blake Corum from Michigan. Prior to the draft, several analysts drew comparisons of Corum’s skill set to Williams. On film, they looked like the same player in different uniforms. If something were to happen to Williams, the Rams offense wouldn’t have to change dramatically to switch over to Corum.

Expecting something bad happening to Williams isn’t paranoia. It may be inevitable. Williams has missed time in both of his first two seasons with foot and ankle injuries. Running backs with foot/ankle problems rarely have a long shelf life, because the injuries tend to recur over and over again.

Williams missed OTA practices this spring with another foot injury – attributed to his aggressive offseason workout program. That marked the fourth time since joining the NFL just over two years ago that Williams has been slowed with foot issues.

Fantasy football outlook

There are mixed feelings on draft day about handcuffing the top fantasy running back with his backup. Some believe it’s a critical investment, while others think it’s a wasted pick. In the case of Williams, however, there should be more unanimity about making sure whoever ends up with him also lands Corum (even if it means reaching for him).

McVay has built a history of saddling up one run back and riding him until he drops and then doing the same with his replacement. In 2021, Akers missed the entire regular season until the final game, yet had 67 carries in the postseason – more than twice the carries as the other Rams running backs combined.

Coming off his amazing 2023 season, Williams deserves to be an RB1 – some analysts have him as a top-five back. Given Williams’ troubling penchant for foot/ankle injuries, he can’t be counted on to play the entire season, so grabbing Corum as an RB4 – while too high for a backup – not only makes sense, it might be necessary. Only one of them will be the workhorse, but having both of them is required for sustained success.

What can we expect the LA Rams’ backfield in fantasy action?

Just how will this RB stable shake out in virtual football?

In 2021, the Los Angeles Rams reached the apex of professional football, hoisting the Lombardi Trophy after winning Super Bowl LVI. Last season, everything fell apart. LA’s offense looked like a shadow of its former self, topping 24 points just twice all year, and the injuries piled up, leaving a skeleton crew that barely resembled the championship club.

While the ground game didn’t have the steep drop off that the rest of the offense did, that was because the Rams weren’t a good running team in 2021 when expected lead back Cam Akers missed nearly the entire regular season due to an Achilles injury. Having Akers and Darrell Henderson available to begin LA’s title defense didn’t help matters, and Henderson ended up getting waived in late November.

Beyond the backs, the offensive line was decimated by injury. The team will be counting on bounce-back years from offensive tackle Joe Noteboom, who played in six games before tearing his Achilles, and center Brian Allen, who appeared in eight games, as well as offensive guard Logan Bruss, a third-round pick that missed his entire rookie campaign with a torn ACL. OG Steve Avila, a second-round selection back in April, and holdover tackle Rob Havenstein, the lone healthy returning lineman, should round out the starting five.

While the Rams need this group to gel and stay healthy to maximize the potential of the running game, there’s always fantasy appeal in backs. That means it’s a good time to look at LA’s backfield to see what they have with which to work.