Rams hope rearranged locker room will lead to better team chemistry

The Rams rearranged their locker room setup for multiple reasons.

Rams players will begin arriving for COVID-19 testing on Monday and Tuesday as the team prepares for the start of training camp. The entire organization as a whole, however, has been getting ready for the arrival of players and staff for quite a while.

Like all other teams, they’ve been tasked with ensuring the facility adheres to league guidelines pertaining to social distancing and limiting the spread of germs – things like spreading lockers out, removing door handles and installing a temperature sensor when entering the building.

Steve Wyche of NFL Network got a tour of the Rams’ rearranged facility and shared some insight in a detailed article on NFL.com. One aspect of this complicated matter that could benefit the Rams is the locker room design.

Rather than putting players in the same position group together in the locker room, the Rams are separating them to hopefully limit the spread of germs among players who play the same position. But more importantly, they hope it leads to better team chemistry by encouraging players to interact with other position groups.

Typically, lockers are set up by position group. Not anymore. Quarterback Jared Goff’s locker has moved. More than six feet away is safety John Johnson’s locker. Six feet from Johnson’s is wide receiver Cooper Kupp’s locker. No players who play the same position have lockers close to one another — a strategic move to help limit potential germ and virus spread among individuals in the same position group, Scott said. It’s also a part of a plan to foster a new culture for a team that two seasons ago played in the Super Bowl, but now, after failing to make the playoffs in 2019, is re-discovering itself. Team leaders requested that players interact more with players they might not be as familiar with or spend as much time with so they can get to know guys better.

Since Sean McVay took over in 2017, there haven’t been any reported rifts or lack of chemistry among players. It’s an indication of just how good a job McVay has done connecting to players and creating a locker room situation that fosters strong energy.

That’s evident on the field and in McVay’s postgame locker room speeches, with players rallying around each other and maintaining a high level of energy, even when things weren’t going as planned last season.

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Look: Rams locker room at practice facility gets complete makeover

The Rams’ locker room at Cal Lutheran got a major upgrade.

The Los Angeles Rams will call SoFi Stadium home beginning this season, but their headquarters will remain in Thousand Oaks at Cal Lutheran. It’s not an ideal situation for a team getting a brand new stadium, but they’re making it work.

And for the first time since the team moved back to L.A. in 2016, the practice facility got a major upgrade. The locker room was completely gutted and received a complete makeover, including new lockers, nameplates, lighting and the redesigned logos.

Here are some shots from a video shared by the Rams this week, showing the new-look locker room.

For as much heat as the Rams caught when they unveiled their new logos, they do look pretty good in the refreshed locker room. That’s not to say they’re perfect, but they look better “in the wild,” so to speak, than they do as a graphic online.

There are a lot of neat aspects of the locker room, including the drop-down seat that reveals spots for jerseys, cleats and anything else players want to keep in their lockers. The L.A. skyline on the nameplates is also a nice touch, as are the lighting effects.

And if you’re wondering what the locker room used to look like, it wasn’t exactly up to par. It was bland and not nearly as nice as the locker rooms you’d see at most FBS football programs.

There was nothing special about the locker room, so this was a much-needed upgrade.

This remodeling comes at a perfect time, since the Rams will be spending training camp at their headquarters in Thousand Oaks instead of traveling to UC Irvine as they do each summer. The NFL has put restrictions in place due to the coronavirus, requiring teams to hold training camp at their primary headquarters.

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