4 wide receivers worked out for Broncos, including Denzel Mims

The Broncos brought in four wide receivers for workouts, including former second-round draft pick Denzel Mims.

The Denver Broncos brought in four wide receivers for workouts on Tuesday, including former second-round draft pick Denzel Mims.

The Broncos hosted Kaden Davis, Leon Johnson, Lance McCutcheon and Mims, according to KPRC-TV’s Aaron Wilson.

Davis (6-1, 190 pounds) entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent out of Northwest Missouri State with Denver in 2022. After spending time on the Broncos’ practice squad that fall, Davis spent the following spring playing in the USFL with the Michigan Panthers. He spent last year on the practice squad of the Arizona Cardinals and this summer with the Detroit Lions.

Johnson (6-5, 207 pounds) signed with the Los Angeles Chargers as an undrafted free agent out of Oklahoma State this spring. He was waived when L.A. set its 53-man roster in August.

McCutcheon (6-3, 202 pounds) entered the league as an undrafted free agent out of Montana State with the Los Angeles Rams in 2022. He has since spent time with the Houston Texans and New York Jets.

Mims (6-3, 207 pounds) was picked by the Jets in the second round of the 2020 NFL draft out of Baylor. He hauled in 42 receptions for 676 yards in three seasons with the Jets before being traded to the Lions in 2023. After being waived/injured by Detroit, Mims spent time on the practice squad of the Pittsburgh Steelers last fall. He went to training camp with the Jacksonville Jaguars this summer but did not make their 53-man roster.

The Broncos seem to be looking for reinforcements at receiver after their WRs struggled to create separation in the team’s season opener on Sunday. Another name that might be worth watching in the coming weeks is former New Orleans Saints receiver Michael Thomas, who has now completed his one-game suspension. Thomas (6-3, 212 pounds) played for the Saints from 2016-2023, spending six years playing for coach Sean Payton.

Denver’s 53-man roster is full, so if the team adds any receivers, the team will have to make room on the active roster.

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6 Rams to watch in preseason finale vs. Broncos

The Rams will take on the Broncos this Saturday to finish their preseason schedule and we have 6 players to watch in the matchup.

The Los Angeles Rams are set to conclude their preseason schedule versus the Denver Broncos on Saturday. This is the last chance for players to get live-action reps in hopes of carving out a roster spot for the Rams ahead of the 2023 season.

The Rams are 0-2 in their first two preseason contests, losing to the Los Angeles Chargers and the Las Vegas Raiders. Even though wins don’t matter in the preseason, Sean McVay will want to see improvements across the board on Saturday.

With the Rams set to face the Broncos on the road in the third week of the preseason, here are six players to keep an eye on.

Lance McCutcheon’s roster spot could be in jeopardy after another quiet preseason game

Lance McCutcheon was a star of the preseason last year, but he has just two catches in two games and is squarely on the roster bubble

Lance McCutcheon became a fan favorite in Los Angeles last summer after a terrific performance in training camp and the preseason. As an undrafted rookie, he stood out in a big way, leading the NFL with 259 yards receiving and two touchdowns on 15 catches.

That propelled him into a spot on the 53-man roster, an impressive feat for the UDFA.

The story has been much different this year, unfortunately. McCutcheon hasn’t made much noise in practice or the preseason, which is putting his roster spot in serious jeopardy. Through two games, McCutcheon has just two receptions for 28 yards on six targets – all of which came last week against the Chargers.

In Saturday night’s loss to the Raiders, McCutcheon was invisible. He only played five snaps and wasn’t targeted once, which seemingly puts him behind the likes of Demarcus Robinson, Puka Nacua, Tyler Johnson and maybe even Austin Trammell on the depth chart.

It’s a crowded receiver room to begin with and McCutcheon isn’t exactly making his presence felt on the field. That’s disappointing because the 6-foot-3 looked like a promising player last year when he was coming down with just about everything thrown his direction.

The Rams could use his size at receiver but they’re not going to keep him on the 53-man roster just because he has a big catch radius. He needs to be a well-rounded receiver capable of actually contributing, starting with special teams.

There’s a good chance that if the Rams do cut McCutcheon this summer, he’ll land back with them on the practice squad. He’s not a receiver that should garner much attention on the waiver wire after putting together two quiet outings in the preseason so far, meaning he’ll get some additional time to develop on the practice squad in 2023.

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6 Rams to watch in preseason Week 2 vs. Raiders

Here are 6 players to watch as the Rams take on the Raiders in the second week of the preseason.

The Los Angeles Rams will host the Las Vegas Raiders for their second preseason contest on Saturday. The Rams are coming off a 34-17 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers in their preseason opener, but the team is focused on determining certain position battles rather than winning meaningless games.

With Week 1 only a few weeks away, time is ticking for players to show enough to earn a roster spot. Ahead of Saturday’s preseason meeting with the Raiders, here are six players from the Rams to pay attention to.

Lance McCutcheon and Terrell Lewis both dealing with injuries entering Week 13

Lance McCutcheon and Terrell Lewis are both dealing with injuries heading into Sunday’s game against the Seahawks

It’s been a season of injuries for the Los Angeles Rams in 2022, and now even their backups are getting hurt. Sean McVay updated reporters on the team’s injuries Monday, sharing that both Lance McCutcheon and Terrell Lewis came out of the loss to the Chiefs banged up.

McVay said McCutcheon has a shoulder injury, which caused him to leave the game and not return. McVay described the injury as an AC sprain, so he’ll be day-to-day leading up to Sunday’s matchup with the Seahawks.

Lewis injured his back in the loss, which is why he played fewer snaps than normal.

“He had a little bit of a disc bulge, L5-S1, that kind of limited his ability to be able to move around and function and have that flexibility,” McVay said.

McCutcheon is helping fill in at wide receiver with Cooper Kupp and Allen Robinson sidelined, but he wasn’t a starter against the Chiefs. He did play a career-high 26 snaps, however.

Lewis is one of three edge rushers left on the roster with Justin Hollins gone, so the Rams need him to be available moving forward. Michael Hoecht stepped up and played more on the edge in place of Hollins and Lewis.

Rams WR Lance McCutcheon questionable to return with shoulder injury

Lance McCutcheon suffered a shoulder injury against the Chiefs and is questionable to return

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Lance McCutcheon got some extended action against the Chiefs on Sunday with Cooper Kupp and Allen Robinson both out with injuries, but he unfortunately went down with an injury of his own.

The Rams announced in the fourth quarter that McCutcheon has a shoulder injury and is questionable to return. He was targeted three times in the game prior to getting hurt, but he didn’t come down with a catch.

Six points with David Dorey

Friday’s quick look at six fantasy items to know

Week 10 finally saw all the forces of nature converge and hand the Eagles their first loss – at home to the Commanders, no less. The Bills lost their second in a row and now are tied for No. 2 in the AFC East. The Chiefs, for the moment, look like the newest “team to beat” in the AFC while the Vikings are on a seven-game winning streak and tied for the No. 1 spot in the NFC with the Eagles – who beat them back in Week 2.

While teams are tinkering with lineups much less overall, we’re entering the phase of the season that will see the bottom feeders switching around starters if only to show management that they are still trying to win and do not need to be fired during the season. One or two probably still will.

The Browns-Bills game is moved to Detroit at 1 p.m. Sunday because this new crop of players cannot handle six feet of snow like we all used to walk through to school. While it would decrease almost all fantasy points from the game, how great would that have been to watch? Maybe not fans in the stands, but at home it would have been a must-watch. Maybe tie those bicycle poles with the little flags at top onto each player.

As we hurdle towards the fantasy playoffs, remember that Week 14 has six teams on bye (ATL, CHI, GB, IND, NO, WAS). Those contain enough fantasy must-starts to matter in a very important week. There is only one other week more important and that is the perpetual “this week.”

Six items to watch for this weekend:

1.) The Broncos – At 3-6, their season is already over but the offense that was supposed to take the next step forward this year tumbled backward. The backfield is a mess between Melvin Gordon, Latavius Murray, and now Chase Edmonds.  Last week versus the Titans, all three played, but the Broncos never had time to get into a rhythm and shared just 18 carries. Against the Raiders, there should be more work to split up, so it will be worth tracking as to what the sharing is and if a dominant receiver emerges.

The Broncos are likely without Jerry Jeudy and KJ Hamler, both of whom missed practices Wednesday and Thursday. Last Sunday, Kendall Hinton caught four passes for 62 yards while Jalen Virgil scored on a 66-yard catch as his first NFL reception. Virgil was the only undrafted free agent to make the 53-man roster and Week 10 was his debut. He replaced Hamler in the lineup. Hinton did not practice on Thursday and could miss this week.

Also notable is the growing sentiment that new HC Nathaniel Hackett may not make it to the end of the season. If that were to happen, it could change the backfield rotation and possibly see more use of players like Virgil.

2.)  The Rams receivers – There’s a two-fold situation in Los Angeles in the wake of Cooper Kupp’s injury and the realization that the 3-6 Rams’ post-Super Bowl record is the worst since the 2006 Steelers. They need to replace Kupp and since the season is over, try out some of the younger talents that hasn’t been afforded much work while Kupp sponged up most of the pass targets.

The disappointing Allen Robinson and unproductive Ben Skowronek are the starters, but Van Jefferson played last week and caught a score on three receptions for 27 yards. He’s not met expectations and his snap share has declined. TuTu Atwell hasn’t played since Week 6 but was a second-round pick in 2021. Lance McCutcheon was an undrafted free agent that made the team and led the receivers in the preseason with 15 catches for 259 yards and a healthy 17.3-yard-average.

It may not matter unless Matt Stafford plays, but the Rams are already forced to start new receivers and Stafford is trending towards returning.

3.)  RB Eno Benjamin, HOU – The Cardinals surprisingly released Benjamin and he was snapped up by the Texans ahead of three other teams that put in claims for him. He was a contributor both as a rusher and a receiver for the Cardinals, and the details as to why he was released has not been disclosed. He averaged 4.3 yards per carry and caught around three passes weekly. The question now is why did the Texans acquire him?

He could be an upgrade to 32-year-old Rex Burkhead who has served as the third-down back for the Texans, and that would make sense. But he’s also a good runner and every Dameon Pierce owner probably doesn’t feel that he needs any resting. But Pierce’s 165 carries ranks No. 3 behind only Saquon Barkley and Derrick Henry. And since Peirce is one of the few positives that came out of 2022, would they want to not overwork him in a season that already is over?

4.) Clyde Edwards-Helaire – The first-round pick in 2020 hasn’t performed to expectations and sank to a new low in Week 10 when he had no carries, failed to catch his two targets, and only had five snaps. Isiah Pacheco commanded 16 runs for 82 yards, and Jerick McKinnon caught six passes for 56 yards despite enter the game as questionable with three injuries. Just to make it all even less certain, the Chiefs tried to pick up Eno Benjamin.

HC Andy Reid said they didn’t have any plan to limit Edwards-Helaire, but that it just worked out that way. The pass-heavy Chiefs may never give a back 20 carries and as of last week, the rushing went to Pacheco, and the receiving belonged to McKinnon. There’s no denying that Edwards-Helaire’s role was dialed back in the rotation, but this week answers if he will end up with more work and limit Pacheco or if he’s just old news on a team that’s moved on from him.

Had the claim for Eno Benjamin been successful, it suggests that Ronald Jones may have been released so he could land elsewhere and might see the field again.

5.)   Colts offense – HC Frank Reich was fired along with OC Marcus Brady the previous week, so the offense of Week 10 was under all new direction. It’s not unusual for a team to win the game following a firing, though the Colts had deconstructed by trading away Nyheim Hines and benching Matt Ryan for the rest of the season. But – after confirming that they were going to stick with Same Ehlinger, the Colts opted to start Ryan last week and won their game over the 2-7 Raiders.

Jonathan Taylor suddenly looked great again, and Michael Pittman (7-53) and Parris Campbell (7-76, TD) came to life. These next two games will indicate if the passing offense is productive again and if Taylor is back to form. The Colts host the Eagles and the Steelers. Taylor, in particular, has been a bust as the first pick in almost every fantasy draft, but ran for 147 yards and a score in Las Vegas.

6.)  RB Najee Harris (PIT) – Along with Jonathan Taylor, the first-round fantasy draft pick Najee Harris disappointed this season after logging more touches (381) than any other running back last year. Here’s the interesting part to that painful reality – he went against one of the worst rushing schedules (No. 31) over the first half of the season. Statistically, only the Ravens had a slightly worst schedule for running backs.

Harris has run so poorly that Jaylen Warren made inroads to a split backfield. Last week, Harris ran for 99 yards on 20 carries against the Saints. Warren gained 37 yards on nine carries and caught three passes for 40 yards. The Steelers have the No. 6 schedule for running backs in the remaining games. This week versus the Bengals is the only time they face a top defense against runners. It’s no guarantee that he will return to 2021 form, but at least the schedule won’t be working against him every week. His performance and the backfield split this week will be worth tracking before his schedule clears up.

It’s time for the Rams to see what they have in their younger players

The Rams’ season is quickly slipping away and it’s time for the younger players to get more snaps

Very little is working for the Los Angeles Rams right now. The offense is one of the worst in the NFL and the defense, as star-studded as it is, has struggled to overcome the tough spots the offense is putting it in.

It’s translated to a 3-6 record and a spot in last place in the NFC West. Cooper Kupp is out, Matthew Stafford is dealing with a concussion, the running game is terrible and the secondary has been inconsistent outside of Jalen Ramsey and Troy Hill.

The Rams aren’t out of it yet, but the outlook of their season is getting increasingly bleak by the week. With Kupp sidelined, it’s time for the Rams to give their younger players a longer look so they can get a better sense of who might have some potential as future starters.

Let’s make one thing clear: I’m not advocating for the Rams to tank and bench their starters. But there is a way for them to give their younger, less proven players a chance to contribute more than they have. And there are five specific players who should get more playing time in the coming weeks, especially if the Rams can’t beat the Saints on Sunday.

The players I’m looking at are Tutu Atwell, Lance McCutcheon, Kyren Williams, Cobie Durant and Robert Rochell.

Rams see Lance McCutcheon as ‘somewhat of a redshirt future prospect’

Lance McCutcheon made the Rams’ 53-man roster as an undrafted rookie, but it could be more of a redshirt year for him in 2022

Lance McCutcheon was the story of the preseason for the Los Angeles Rams, breaking out in a big way by leading the league in receiving yards over the course of the three games. He built a strong connection with Bryce Perkins, who like McCutcheon, also made the 53-man roster.

As exciting as it was to see McCutcheon’s name on the list of players who made the team, fans should temper their expectations for him as a rookie. After all, he is the seventh receiver on the depth chart.

Rams GM Les Snead told reporters that while Jake Hummel and Keir Thomas could be active on game days, McCutcheon probably won’t be this season – and it could be more of a redshirt year for him.

“Jake’s someone who’s gonna be on our 48-man roster,” Snead said. “Lance is someone who probably will not be on the 48-man roster, but definitely made our 53. Keir is a player who has a chance to be active on game day. All three of those players carved out a role, whether it was Hummel on special teams, whether it was Keir as a fourth OLB, whether it was Lance as somewhat of a redshirt future prospect.”

The Rams have a ton of wide receiver depth, from Cooper Kupp down to McCutcheon. Kupp, Allen Robinson and Van Jefferson will get the bulk of the targets and opportunities when healthy, while Ben Skowronek and Tutu Atwell could get some reps as backups. There’s also Brandon Powell, who’s the primary return specialist.

The Rams couldn’t risk cutting McCutcheon and losing him on the waiver wire, especially after the attention he garnered with his standout preseason. They’d rather keep him on the team for a year and make him inactive on game days and save him for the future.

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Mic’d up: Lance McCutcheon gets lesson from Cooper Kupp during Rams-Bengals game

Lance McCutcheon was mic’d up against the Bengals and there was a cool teaching moment with Cooper Kupp

Lance McCutcheon worked hard to make the Rams’ 53-man roster this summer, putting up great numbers in the preseason and standing out during training camp. Coaches have raved about him, and his teammates love what they’ve seen from the undrafted rookie, too.

McCutcheon has quickly become a fan favorite, and those in Los Angeles will appreciate him even more after watching the Rams’ latest mic’d-up video. He wore a mic during the team’s preseason finale against the Bengals, and while the entire video is worth watching, there’s a cool teaching moment between Cooper Kupp and McCutcheon at the 3:40 mark.

Kupp talks to McCutcheon about his route and gives him some tips about beating press coverage when the defender gets into him.

“When you feel him start to come into you like that, pushing you to the sideline, have that swipe ready because you’re going to start feeling that momentum going that got you running to the sideline,” Kupp told the rookie. “If he’s gonna put his hands on you, if you can just be ready to swipe down or swipe up and get off that, he’s gonna push you right into your route. Great job.”

Kupp is touted for his leadership and it’s moments like this that show why. He’s not only a fantastic receiver, but an even better teammate.