MVP, Most Improved & more: 2020 Rams End of Season Awards

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MVP, Most Improved & more: 2020 Rams End of Season Awards

Barely a week since the season came to a close and already so much has changed for the Los Angeles Rams.

Brandon Staley was hired away, and Raheem Morris was selected to replace him as defensive coordinator.

Sean McVay also made a switch on special teams, bringing in Joe DeCamillis to revamp what is traditionally a difference-making phase of the Rams organization.

And even the quarterback depth chart for 2021 is subject to further review.

But before we get too deep into the offseason and all the roster renovation that NFL teams tackle each new year, let's reflect back on what was a successful campaign, on and off the field, by acknowledging some individual standouts.

Here are my 2020 awards for the Rams.

Most Valuable Player: Aaron Donald

With him, it felt like the Rams could conquer just about any challenge. Without his best in Green Bay, against the most prolific offense in the NFL, the void felt cavernous.

The top defense in the league was able to play with light boxes and wreak havoc rushing four for much of the year, because Donald is a one-man blitz.

If not for his unprecedented 2018, this season might be regarded as his best yet. But it's not just what Donald does individually, it's the way he elevates those around him.

Nothing against Dante Fowler, but after a career-high 11.5 sacks last season playing next to the best defensive player on the planet, he collected a career-low three sacks in Atlanta in 2020.

Six of Donald's teammates this year had at least that many – (six!) – including the likes of Leonard Floyd and Morgan Fox, who will benefit in free agency, just as Fowler did.

Offensive Player of the Year: Cooper Kupp

This was the category I struggled with most. It wasn't a banner year on offense.

The line improved immensely, but their standout was Andrew Whitworth, who was injured in Week 10.

Darrell Henderson was one of the league's top backs in the first half of the season, but those games feel like years ago. Cam Akers was tremendous down the stretch, but prior to his first NFL touchdown at Tampa Bay was hardly a factor statistically.

Ultimately, it came down to Kupp or Robert Woods, and I'd have been perfectly fine choosing second between them.

I settled on Kupp in large part because of what he did as a run blocker this year. Sure, he had his highlight moments: the 55-yarder to beat the Giants and the 44-yard snag in the Wild Card win come to mind immediately. But the way he created for Rams running backs throughout the year was critical to the offense's efficiency. No receiver (minimum 120 run-blocking snaps) graded higher in that PFF metric.

Again, I wouldn't argue with a career-high eight touchdowns for Woods, plus another in the playoffs.

Defensive Rookie of the Year: Jordan Fuller

Unfortunately for L.A., this was the simplest selection due to lack of competition.

Classmates Terrell Lewis and Terrell Burgess had their debut campaigns derailed by injury. But that shouldn't take anything away from Fuller's accomplishment.

The 17th safety drafted in 2020, Fuller emerged from training camp as an unquestioned starter. Fighting through an early-season injury of his own, he returned from injured reserve to intercept Tom Brady twice on Monday Night Football and finish the year with three picks as well as a top-40 PFF grade at his position.

Offensive Rookie of the Year: Cam Akers

"I imagine Cam Akers is going to be a leader of this football team quickly," team captain and 39-year-old Andrew Whitworth said following the Rams elimination in Green Bay.

It's hard to think of higher praise for a rookie running back.

Akers played well, he played hurt, and at times when his unit seemed handcuffed, he unlocked the offense. He and fellow rookie Van Jefferson saved their best for last, one of many reasons for optimism heading into 2021.

Most Improved Player: Sebastian Joseph-Day

Austin Corbett was plenty deserving here, but since the defense outperformed the offense, I opted for Joseph-Day.

Not only is he one of the most likeable personalities on the roster, but his career arc is the kind you can't help but celebrate.

After a "redshirt year" in 2018, Joseph-Day broke into the lineup as a rotational piece for Wade Phillips in 2019 – after the team drafted Greg Gaines to compete for his gig.

Then in 2020, the Rams brought in a former top-50 pick, A'Shawn Robinson. Plus, when his deal fell through in Baltimore, Michael Brockers returned to the position group that prides itself on Dawgwork.

Instead of getting lost in the shuffle, Joseph-Day became a household name for Rams fans and a known commodity around the NFL, as well. On a star-studded defense, only these players finished with higher PFF grades: Donald, John Johnson III, Darious Williams, and Ramsey.

After a season like that, we'll gladly take his nickname guidance under advisement.

Comeback Player of the Year: Rob Havenstein

The Rams right tackle responded from an injury-plagued season and a career-low PFF grade in 2019 to play a career-high in snaps and rank 18th among offensive tackles in 2020.

The offensive line's resurgence mirrored that of his own. Collectively, they were a bright spot.

Mid-Season Addition of the Year: Matt Gay

His success was so refreshing, we had to create a new category to honor him.

Gay connected on his final 13 field goal tries, including a perfect 4-for-4 mark in his first postseason. He was spotless on extra points and 80 percent of his kickoffs resulted in touchbacks.

A raw nerve for the first half of the season, placekicker suddenly became a weapon again for Los Angeles just in time for their playoff push.

Still relatively new to his chosen profession, there seems to be plenty of upside in Gay's game. He's got the potential to be a fixture on special teams for the indefinite future.
 

Gandalf

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It sucks when you look at offensive player of the year and not one person stands out. Akers looked good, but didn't play enough. He did well in the playoffs though.
 

CGI_Ram

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Sebastian Joseph-Day

Easy guy to root for.

Joseph-Day plays 40%+ of the defensive snaps. He’s super important.

Excellent season in 2020, too. Really emerged, heard his name more on game day, etc.
 

RamDino

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I would have made Kupp and Woods Co-Offensive players of the year.

And how about leadership awards for Brockers on D and Whitworth on O, although we really don't know from the players perspectives.
 

NJRamsFan

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Easy guy to root for.

Joseph-Day plays 40%+ of the defensive snaps. He’s super important.

Excellent season in 2020, too. Really emerged, heard his name more on game day, etc.
Plus he went to Rutgers.
 

Psycho_X

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Agree with your list for most part. If Whitworth hadn't got injured I'd put him instead of Kupp. Same for Akers. Frustratingly ironic that Kupp then immediately got injured in playoffs.

Agree with SJD, his offseason dedication was admirable and made him a force. He keeps that up he'll be one of our best players before long.

For come back, I'd pick JJ3 probably since he was actually out most of the year yesterday.
 

badnews

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Williams played like a super star.

He has to be in the top 10 of "most improved" players in the league.
 

oldnotdead

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Havenstein sucks!! Go ahead and look back at games where he whiffed on pass blocks and run blocks. Who the hell is making these evals because it's obvious he or they aren't really watching games. The clue is their mention of PFF and IMO they are going strictly by PFF grades. PFF has been PROVEN to be a total joke. Only the media and other outsiders use it. They actually downgrade guys who are doing exactly what they are supposed to do.

Blythe is no better but they continue to overestimate his play. Why? Because they simply don't know how to evaluate American Football. Their matrix was created for soccer, not the NFL.

Just look at SeaBass' play. He continues to struggle to disengage. He simply doesn't or can't shed a block. Watch Gaines and he does shed blocks and he makes plays.

Last year Ebukam played his SAM position so well QB's would roll to the opposite side and they would run to the opposite perimeter because Samsom sets a hard edge. So what does PFF do? They downgrade him for doing exactly what he's supposed to be doing.

MOST IMPROVED PLAYER??

How about Leonard Floyd? When he was signed I think I was the only one who saw him as a clear upgrade to Fowler. The clear majority were ready to write him off before the season began. I keep saying how good a player looks has as much to do with how the coaches play him. In Chicago they played him all over. Staley correctly played him as a JACK. IMHO Floyd has exceeded most people's expectations. Now people are worried about losing him. Snead won't let him walk and Floyd is smart enough to know this team allowed him to showcase his talent and will continue to do so.

This team is simply loaded with talent on both sides of the ball. Offensively McVay needs to reinvent his offense into an inside power run attack. Establish that then all his finesse passing attack will work just fine. Sean needs to understand he's as big a part of the problem offensively as Goff is.
 

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PFF: Sebastian Joseph-Day is a breakout candidate in 2021

Aaron Donald built on his remarkable legacy this season, finishing second in the NFL with 13.5 sacks and a league-high 98 pressures. But while he deserves all the attention and recognition he’s received, he wasn’t the Rams’ only productive defensive lineman in 2020.

Sebastian Joseph-Day stepped up in a big way in his second year as the starting nose tackle, lining up between Donald and Michael Brockers most of the time. In 16 games, all of which he started, Joseph-Day made 55 tackles, had one sack, hit the QB four times and batted three passes.

He finished with an overall grade of 80.6 from Pro Football Focus, which was one of the highest for a defensive interior player. And heading into 2021, PFF sees Joseph-Day getting even better.

Sam Monson picked one breakout candidate for each team next season and Joseph-Day was the selection for the Rams.

Aaron Donald is a one-man pass-rush upfront, but the Rams have been trying to find quality help alongside him for a while. Michael Brockers has been solid, but the team wouldn’t mind moving on if it found a cheaper alternative. Sebastian Joseph-Day has played a little under 500 snaps in each of the past two seasons, seeing his impact and overall PFF grade steadily improve over that time. He had 38 defensive stops and a 72.0 PFF run-defense grade in 2020, including the playoffs, and could be in line for a bigger role in 2021.

Joseph-Day had big shoes to fill in 2019 after Ndamukong Suh left, and he did an admirable job in his first season as a starter. He got even better this season, clogging up running lanes and proving to be a big reason the Rams ranked third in rushing defense.

Los Angeles should feel good about Joseph-Day remaining a starter in 2021, which will be the last year of his rookie contract. He’s shored up that position in a big way.
 

oldnotdead

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I suggest the following about SJD. He played over 40% of the defensive snaps. In some games, it was well over 50%. His impact was about average considering 55 combined tackles, 1 TFL, 4 QB hits, 1 sack. Compare that to Greg Gaines who played less than 20% of the defensive snaps. He recorded 18 combined tackles, 1 TFL, 3QB hits, 1.5 sacks. According to the stats Gaines did as much with half the snaps. I'm not advocating Gaines, but simply pointing out why no true NFL coach considers PFF legit as they simply don't know what they are looking at. PFF graded SJF 80.6 while downgrading Gaines to 65, despite having an equal impact on half the snaps? That is the danger of simply relying upon a suspect source to pass judgments.
 

badcop

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Gaines is the true NT. SJD is too frequently blown off the ball and would be better at 3 or 5 tech. Gaines creates havoc in the middle of the line and clogs it up and is rarely moved and always held. He attracts double teams as well. Watch film and you'll see running backs frequently have to bounce out as inside lanes aren't available. Makes tackles at or close to the line not 5 yards down field because that's how far back he'd been pushed. Best option for NT by a fair margin. No need for Ashawn and his cost.