Can The Los Angeles Rams Go Death Row In 2019?

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BonifayRam

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https://lastwordonprofootball.com/2019/05/04/can-los-angeles-rams-go-death-row/
Can The Los Angeles Rams Go Death Row In 2019?
By
[URL='https://lastwordonprofootball.com/author/tonylopez/']Tony Lopez

-
May 4, 2019

Los-Angeles-Rams.jpg
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GLENDALE, AZ - DECEMBER 30: Washington Huskies defensive back Taylor Rapp (21) watches the play during the Fiesta Bowl college football game between the Penn State Nittany Lions and the Washington Huskies on December 30, 2017 at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona(Photo by Kevin Abele/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
It would certainly strike us as either odd or so him, the sight of Wade Phillips sporting dark shades and looking all street hard…or attempting to. But no, Southern Cal and rap/hip-hop enthusiasts everywhere. To my knowledge, the team has no plans to revive the record label founders Dr. Dre and Suge Knight made famous. However, with drafting two University of Washington Huskies one might ask, can the Los Angeles Rams go Death Row in 2019 and beyond? They can, if so inspired.

Can The Los Angeles Rams Go Death Row?
The 2019 NFL Draft is now done and in the books. The Rams added eight new players via the NFL draft. Two of the eight, safety Taylor Rapp and interior defensive lineman Greg Gaines, are former Washington Huskies. This is increasingly interesting and social media is starting to notice. But why?

In this case, because defensively the Huskies are known, at least regionally, as the “Death Row” defense. And make no mistake, it’s with reason. As indicated on each helmet, they are the “DAWGS” of the Pac-12. A potent defensive squad that has led their conference in points allowed the last four years and counting. Their list of accomplishments in recent years are ongoing and include:

  • Pac-12 leaders in points allowed (2015 through 2018)
  • Pac-12 leaders in defensive points scored (2015 through 2018)
  • 2nd or better (Pac-12) against the run each year since 2014
  • 2nd (Pac-12) in sacks four of last six seasons
  • Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year 2017 (DL Vita Vea) and 2018 (LB Ben Burr-Kirven)
  • Holding opponents to 10 points or less (2015 through 2018): more than doubled total games of any other Pac-12 football team.
Love at first sight for the Washington guys.

Scouting the Scouts: How did @trapp07 + @GregGaines99 impress area scout Vito Gonella? pic.twitter.com/w1eQC9kyuP

— Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) May 3, 2019

The Making Of Dawg Central, California
The Los Angeles Rams already have two ex-Huskies expected to return starters on defense in Marcus Peters and Cory Littleton. The two new additions put the NFC conference champions at the top of the league in Death Row hires. The Arizona Cardinals currently have four Huskies on their roster but only three play defense. What’s more, the horned dawgs have a much better chance of filling starting roles and sooner. Conceivably on defense, there could be four starters from the University of Washington.

The Fight In The Dawg, Greg Gaines
The first thing people notice in getting to know Greg Gaines is that his arms are worryingly short. In fact, the word “stubby” instantly comes to mind and scouts have been quoted using it. After reading these numerous scattered criticisms you can find yourself buying in and fear he won’t fill Ndamukong Suh’s shoes. Fear not.

The truth is, the Los Angeles Rams don’t exactly need him to fill Suh’s kicks, they need him to absorb some of the double-teams Aaron Donald commands more effectively. Listed at 6’2″, 316lbs, Gaines is stout like Donald. He’s got natural strength like Donald but brings to the table the ability to bull rush somewhat like Suh. What’s more, he’s liable to do it more often because – unlike Suh, allegedly – he doesn’t fancy taking plays off.

Gaines stays motivated and was a fan favorite at Washington because of his tenaciousness. He’s slow off the ball and has competition in camp there, for sure. But even that could actually be a compliment at times. Opposing defenses must game plan away from Donald, first and foremost. The means – as you’ve seen all too often in 2018 alone – that teams often call plays designed to take advantage of the Rams overzealous attacks on defense. Should Gaines win a starting spot and with free agent additions, I doubt this happens as much going forward.

As a whole, Gaines should rarely get pushed off gaps being a true 2-gap DT. Having played alongside 2017 teammate Vita Vea and now possibly Aaron Donald, running backs may become dawg food. He’s probably more effective in 4-3 packages but more important, he’s a real football player. A scrapper. A junkyard dog that simply needs to be turned loose.

The Fight In The Dawg, Taylor Rapp
Rams fans are going to love this kid for years to come. With his boyish charm, his natural ability and under Eric Weddle’s wing, how can they not? This will become especially true when he solidifies himself with a few more pounds of seasoned NFL Grade A beef. He flies to the ball from any and everywhere on the field so expect the effort to be contagious.

Rapp’s three years at Washington includes 168 tackles, seven interceptions and six sacks. In 2018, he led his team in sacks and the entire Pac-12 in tackling percentage, according to Pro Football Focus. He plays the run exceptionally well and knows how to tackle. Improving consistently, his pass game is fluid with excellent pursuit and recovery. One of PFF’s highest-graded safeties, he plays all over the field at what can be considered elite level. His play recognition is also top tier and the reason he could have very few better mentors than Weddle.

Taylor Rapp's passer rating when targeted of just 12.0 was by FAR the lowest mark in the Pac-12! #NFLDraft pic.twitter.com/Nh5PyOHvQ6

— Pro Football Focus (@PFF) April 27, 2019

One dimension I would not overlook in the progression of Taylor Rapp is his motivation.

“There’s not a lot of Asian-Americans in sports…In football there’s none,” Taylor said in a Rolling With The Rookies video installment. He went to say that it’s his mission is to be that role model Asian-American kids are inspired by. He knows what it’s like to feel the awkwardness of looking and being treated differently. This drives him going forward and the Rams and their fans stand to reap the benefits.

The End Game, Dawg
No, seriously. The end game is just that. The Rams have dawgs coming in this off-season and that’s not limited to draft selections only. Don’t be too stunned if a UDFA signing or two make the final roster at some point soon enough. What they recently lost in size and experience with starters they may have gained in determination and dawgedness (equals doggedness on ‘roids — your new word for the day).

From the safe distance of springtime, the Rams have a fair chance to excel to the next level defensively. Truth be told, it’s about time. Total team defense on Wade Phillips’ watch is 19th-ranked now in back-to-back years after becoming a top 10 unit in 2016. Sure, there has been mitigating circumstances but fan patience is slowly thinning. Frankly, I see the opposite of what some experts think in that the Rams inexperience will be costly. I think we can expect to see better overall pursuit and tackling backing the defensive line. I see more hunger and yes, I see Wade letting the dawgs out (barking here is optional).

#Rams 2019 NFL Draft selections begs the question: Will being the new #1 employer of @UW_Football "Death Row Dawgs" inspire #MobSquad to adopt the nickname? #Ramily, #LARams #Dawgs (Photo: Johnny Andrews/The Seattle Times) pic.twitter.com/8wlY7ne1Yt

— Mob Times (@GridDawgs247) May 3, 2019

If The Shoe Fits, Why Not?
You have to admit; Death Row Dawgs sounds pretty good. And I’m pretty sure we would own it first in California at the pro level, if not league-wide. Yes, the defense first has to be deserving so go calling Big Whit Big Suge anytime soon.

But it can work. Multiple nicknames are acceptable and yet there’s always the risk of a new tag threatening to replace the still well-received nickname of the St. Louis years, MobSquad.
 

den-the-coach

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FWIW Ohio State played Washington in the Rose Bowl and were up 28-3 by the 3rd Quarter and coasted the rest of the way winning 28-23, but it was not that close. My feeling on the Huskies is they were a bunch of try hard players, but not very athletic and I was never worried in this game.

Gaines played hard and so did the others, but it was obvious the Huskies did not have the athletes to stand up to the Buckeyes. Now in college football, you can win with those type of players as Iowa consistently does, but the key is to have the right combinations of the Greg Gaines & Dante Fowler's of the world, the never say die guys combined with the athletic players that are explosive and can make big plays.

I have always respected the Washington Huskie program going back to the days of Don James & Jim Lampbright....However, again the need for the right combination is crucial and under McSnead I believe the Los Angeles Rams do a great job of that and encourage everyone to head to the Rams website and view the videos on the area scouts like Brian Hill on Long & Edwards & Billy Johnson's synoposis of RB Darrell Henderson closing with the Director of College Scouting in Brad Holmes!

https://www.therams.com/video/
 

badnews

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Glad the kids made it off of Death Row thanks to the Snead/McVay Innocence Project.
Welcome to the Mob Squad.
 

Merlin

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The Huskeyesque feel of that article made me want to take a shower. But still...

Rams got 2 guys there who love the game and who perform their roles very well for what the team needs right now. Gaines cannot be ignored, he is not some fatbody on the inside who will only clutter up lanes, he will push his gap in this defense and certain matchups will require double team particularly when an offense wants to run inside. Rapp is an immediate help vs the run and when he brings it on the blitz he has some suddenness to him that should play well in this scheme.

Both those guys are top shelf in terms of character and should be long term role players at a minimum, and there's upside. Rapp could end up being a Pro Bowl type player if he continues to improve his coverage skills. Gaines has an opportunity to start and get major snaps right out the gate and could easily end up being a plus NT who anchors a Super Bowl champion defense in his rookie season.

This draft in general brought in absolute fits in We Not Me. Only questionable pick was our last one, and he seems to be a guy who learned a big lesson. I suspect this one is going to go down as a crucial draft for stocking the roster with crucial role players who bring top shelf character and grow into future leaders on this team.
 

fearsomefour

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I would understand the S being associated with death row with his Rapp sheet.

Anyway, I thought the Rams signed Aaron Hernandez or something.
 

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They can chat all they want but the fact remains talent wise the SEC is the premier college football conference.
The ACC is the bomb ~ Aaron 'Freakin' Donald, PITT Alum
 

dang

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They can chat all they want but the fact remains talent wise the SEC is the premier college football conference.
Agreed but college talent doesn't always translate to the NFL - see Greg Robinson, Alec Ogeltree, Dominique Easley, Tre Mason, Barrett Jones, etc.
 

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Agreed but college talent doesn't always translate to the NFL - see Greg Robinson, Alec Ogeltree, Dominique Easley, Tre Mason, Barrett Jones, etc.
No doubt. Playing in the SEC doesn't guarantee a successful NFL career. Much better likelihood of getting noticed by the NFL and of playing against more of the best talent than any other conference. It isn't even close. As of 2018-
CONFERENCE PLAYERS ON NFL ROSTERS
SEC 335
Big Ten 239
ACC 228
Pac-12 210
Big 12 123
American 100
Mountain West 63
C-USA 63
Independent 40
MAC 39
Sun Belt 20
https://www.ncaa.com/news/football/article/2018-09-11/colleges-most-represented-2018-nfl-rosters
 

wolfdogg

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Don't like the name death row. Don't like highjacking a college nickname (lame 12 Seattle). I like mob squad but feel something better and even epic will come organically.
 

dang

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No doubt. Playing in the SEC doesn't guarantee a successful NFL career. Much better likelihood of getting noticed by the NFL and of playing against more of the best talent than any other conference. It isn't even close. As of 2018-
CONFERENCE PLAYERS ON NFL ROSTERS
SEC 335
Big Ten 239
ACC 228
Pac-12 210
Big 12 123
American 100
Mountain West 63
C-USA 63
Independent 40
MAC 39
Sun Belt 20
https://www.ncaa.com/news/football/article/2018-09-11/colleges-most-represented-2018-nfl-rosters
My point is there is no doubt the SEC is the premier college conference with premier talent. I just believe we are all conditioned to think that a player from the SEC is always the best choice during the draft. I think the Rams for one have figured that out recently and are not picking players too early in the draft just because they come from an Alabama, LSU, Florida, Georgia, Auburn, etc.
 

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FWIW Ohio State played Washington in the Rose Bowl and were up 28-3 by the 3rd Quarter and coasted the rest of the way winning 28-23, but it was not that close. My feeling on the Huskies is they were a bunch of try hard players, but not very athletic and I was never worried in this game.

Gaines played hard and so did the others, but it was obvious the Huskies did not have the athletes to stand up to the Buckeyes. Now in college football, you can win with those type of players as Iowa consistently does, but the key is to have the right combinations of the Greg Gaines & Dante Fowler's of the world, the never say die guys combined with the athletic players that are explosive and can make big plays.

I have always respected the Washington Huskie program going back to the days of Don James & Jim Lampbright....However, again the need for the right combination is crucial and under McSnead I believe the Los Angeles Rams do a great job of that and encourage everyone to head to the Rams website and view the videos on the area scouts like Brian Hill on Long & Edwards & Billy Johnson's synoposis of RB Darrell Henderson closing with the Director of College Scouting in Brad Holmes!

https://www.therams.com/video/

Yes, the right combination is important. You can't have 22 all pros on your team with the salary cap. You just need enough of them teamed with the right role players to win. Our defense during the regular season did not seem to have that combination. But they did step up in the playoffs. Maybe this year that combination will come together. But its not like they have to shut people down with our offense scoring points.