Rams select Stetson Bennett (QB) with the 128th pick.

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Something that may have interesting to only me was seeing Stetson Bennett getting interviewed by Vince Ferragamo and the old wolf Jackie Slater. I compared the level of Stetson's vision compared to Vince's. Jackie is no longer a monster when compared to rookies like Steve Avila and others, but I imagined Bennett trying just see over our linemen while they are blocking defensive monsters on the other side. Developing routes and tricky boy defenders doing safety blitzes and other disguised actions when he's trying to read the field and find receivers hopefully won't be a disaster if he had to step in for Matthew during a real game. Maybe he'll do alright like @den-the-coach always says?
 

den-the-coach

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if he had to step in for Matthew during a real game. Maybe he'll do alright like @den-the-coach always says?
As long as Bennett doesn't get Sean McVay fired because McVay asks him to pick up a hot dog wrapper I think I will be okay with Stetson Bennett.
 

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Stetson Bennett fits into Rams’ vision for the future, and Matthew Stafford is playing his part​

Jori Epstein
Jori Epstein
Senior NFL reporter
Wed, Aug 9, 2023, 12:35 PM GMT+10·7 min read
3

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Stetson Bennett isn't expected to play much his rookie year, but that doesn't mean the Rams don't have plans for him later. (Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Stetson Bennett isn't expected to play much his rookie year, but that doesn't mean the Rams don't have plans for him later. (Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)More
IRVINE, Calif. — The corner was Stetson Bennett’s fourth read.
The Los Angeles Rams quarterback knew his progressions cycled right to left on this training camp scramble-drill play. A teammate’s twitch route was the first look, another’s skinny the next. Then came a pivot route and only afterward the corner.
But when Bennett slid up and moved with the pressure, the fourth-round rookie saw wide receiver Lance McCutcheon — he of the corner route — had a step on his defender. So Bennett threw it. He found McCutcheon.

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“How’d you get there?” Bennett says head coach Sean McVay asked.“Well, it was man-to-man,” Bennett explained. “I had to slide up. I felt some space and I just saw him and threw it.”
“How’d you get there?” Bennett says head coach Sean McVay asked.
“Well, it was man-to-man,” Bennett explained. “I had to slide up. I felt some space and I just saw him and threw it.”
The play illustrates why Bennett excites the Rams and where the most room for growth continues to loom.
Count Bennett’s off-schedule throws, improvisation and football instinct among the reasons the Rams spent the 128th overall draft pick on the Georgia product. Count Bennett’s success due to feel rather than progression or playbook familiarity as a reminder of where Bennett can still grow in earning coaches’ and teammates’ trust. The Rams hope they won’t need Bennett to enter in relief of 15-year pro Matthew Stafford this season. They hope, even, that Bennett’s services won’t be of much use for some time after that.

“I’m a big fan of his game and how he plays it,” Rams general manager Les Snead told Yahoo Sports. “Obviously the mobility factor that’s come into our league, he has that. Time will tell whether he has what it takes to be the heir apparent. But right now?
“If I was selfish, I would definitely try to talk [Stafford] into giving us three more seasons.”
Three more seasons for Stafford could benefit not only the veteran and the Rams but also his newest teammate. Bennett reminds himself that he didn’t memorize and metabolize now-Baltimore Ravens coordinator Todd Monken’s Georgia offense right away before he went on to earn offensive MVP honors in Georgia’s national championship victory earlier this year. It takes time.

And Stafford, a fellow former Bulldog whom Stafford says is “the coolest guy ever,” can help.
The 2009 No. 1 overall pick has a powerful arm that Snead says operates more like a 19-year-old’s appendage than a 35-year-old’s. Stafford has thrown for 52,082 career yards and 333 touchdowns, winning 89 regular-season games and four more playoff appearances, including Super Bowl LVI. Bennett can learn from Stafford’s skill and the vast encyclopedia of pro looks he’s faced.
“Whenever they’re talking in playbook language, I’m like, I wish y’all would dumb it down so I can have a little bit of this conversation. Otherwise, I’m just sitting here grinning,” Bennett said, describing the universal rookie experience. “But whenever I do ask [Stafford] questions, and it’s me and him talking, he’s good about filtering and knowing what I understand.
“He speaks in my tongue, which has been nice.”
The learning curve is steep, Bennett scrambling to digest new verbiage and acclimate to head set play calls rather than sideline signals, a cue he says “hits your brain [in] a completely different way.”

The caliber of play rises from what he faced in a Heisman-finalist campaign in his final year at Georgia, featuring 4,128 passing yards, 27 touchdowns and just seven interceptions in addition to 10 rushing touchdowns.
The preseason slate beginning this weekend will be a meaningful step toward that acclimation and one that Snead says will better reflect Bennett’s potential than training camp practices.
“Because when you have to tackle Stetson, like you actually gotta get him on the ground?” Snead says. “That’s where you see some of his superpowers come to fruition.”


The road ahead for Bennett​

Bennett laughs when reminded to celebrate the wins amid what can feel like far more frequent waves of frustration. He’s reached a level where he knows what football should look and feel like, but he’s also climbed to a tier where it usually takes time to actualize those visions.
The same difficulties that frustrate him also comfort him because, “I crave discipline. I like to be coached. Like to be told what to do because … if I know what to do, then I do it, you know what I’m saying?
“But then also knowing when you can have that freedom just frees you up.”
He considers similarly the move from Athens, Georgia — where he was hardly low profile — to the enormity of Los Angeles an exercise in both discipline and freedom. There are rules on and off the field. But without a developed character, is there a different freedom to be himself than in his tenure at Georgia?
“I went in there as a teenager and spent six years there,” Bennett said. “You kind of find yourself there and when you find yourself in a spot like that and then you leave, you're like, ‘Oh, man. Was that myself or is that just myself there? So there's this learning curve that goes into it.

“There is pressure and I love pressure to play football.”
Offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur sees Bennett embracing that pressure, the contrast evident between live action and meetings, where “you can see the wheels turning in a good way … because he’s so deep into thought."
“All you had to do is pop on the tape and you just saw — the best way to say it is ‘a baller’,” LaFleur told Yahoo Sports. “He had good fundamentals and all that and a cool system. But you could just tell the game came quiet to him. It came easy to him.”
It continued to come quiet during a late OTA practice when Bennett lined up with the second-team and a play call needed adjusting. Bennett didn’t flinch, correcting the look in a two-minute drill to throw an alert on a corner route that install meetings had not yet covered. He found tight end Brycen Hopkins for a touchdown.

LaFleur thought to himself: “Man, it’s getting more comfortable.”
How soon that comfort will really settle remains to be seen, Rams coaches and front office members not looking to rush the arrival anymore than Bennett is. Bennett knows his NFL career is no guarantee. On one hand, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott rose from fourth-rounder to starter his rookie season, Prescott’s now-eighth year in the role marking the longest active tenure of any NFL quarterback with the same team. On the other: Only 46.9% of fourth-round draft picks since 2000 have ever found a starting role in the NFL. The opportunities at quarterback are fewer and far between than most positions.
Bennett knows what the macro goals are: to win a Super Bowl and to start in the NFL. But he declines to fixate on goals because “I’ve kind of always been, not scared of goals, but I like living life. I like doing the best I can every day and then seeing where it shows up.”
So he eschews specific goals for chronic commitment to improvement, keeping in mind a favorite quote from Georgia head coach Kirby Smart along the way.
“Success,” Smart told his players, “comes to those who are too busy to look for it.”
.
 

Tano

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Stetson Bennett fits into Rams’ vision for the future, and Matthew Stafford is playing his part​

Jori Epstein
Jori Epstein
Senior NFL reporter
Wed, Aug 9, 2023, 12:35 PM GMT+10·7 min read
3

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Stetson Bennett isn't expected to play much his rookie year, but that doesn't mean the Rams don't have plans for him later. (Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)'t expected to play much his rookie year, but that doesn't mean the Rams don't have plans for him later. (Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Stetson Bennett isn't expected to play much his rookie year, but that doesn't mean the Rams don't have plans for him later. (Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)More
IRVINE, Calif. — The corner was Stetson Bennett’s fourth read.
The Los Angeles Rams quarterback knew his progressions cycled right to left on this training camp scramble-drill play. A teammate’s twitch route was the first look, another’s skinny the next. Then came a pivot route and only afterward the corner.
But when Bennett slid up and moved with the pressure, the fourth-round rookie saw wide receiver Lance McCutcheon — he of the corner route — had a step on his defender. So Bennett threw it. He found McCutcheon.

ADVERTISEMENT

“How’d you get there?” Bennett says head coach Sean McVay asked.“Well, it was man-to-man,” Bennett explained. “I had to slide up. I felt some space and I just saw him and threw it.”
“How’d you get there?” Bennett says head coach Sean McVay asked.
“Well, it was man-to-man,” Bennett explained. “I had to slide up. I felt some space and I just saw him and threw it.”
The play illustrates why Bennett excites the Rams and where the most room for growth continues to loom.
Count Bennett’s off-schedule throws, improvisation and football instinct among the reasons the Rams spent the 128th overall draft pick on the Georgia product. Count Bennett’s success due to feel rather than progression or playbook familiarity as a reminder of where Bennett can still grow in earning coaches’ and teammates’ trust. The Rams hope they won’t need Bennett to enter in relief of 15-year pro Matthew Stafford this season. They hope, even, that Bennett’s services won’t be of much use for some time after that.

“I’m a big fan of his game and how he plays it,” Rams general manager Les Snead told Yahoo Sports. “Obviously the mobility factor that’s come into our league, he has that. Time will tell whether he has what it takes to be the heir apparent. But right now?
“If I was selfish, I would definitely try to talk [Stafford] into giving us three more seasons.”
Three more seasons for Stafford could benefit not only the veteran and the Rams but also his newest teammate. Bennett reminds himself that he didn’t memorize and metabolize now-Baltimore Ravens coordinator Todd Monken’s Georgia offense right away before he went on to earn offensive MVP honors in Georgia’s national championship victory earlier this year. It takes time.

And Stafford, a fellow former Bulldog whom Stafford says is “the coolest guy ever,” can help.
The 2009 No. 1 overall pick has a powerful arm that Snead says operates more like a 19-year-old’s appendage than a 35-year-old’s. Stafford has thrown for 52,082 career yards and 333 touchdowns, winning 89 regular-season games and four more playoff appearances, including Super Bowl LVI. Bennett can learn from Stafford’s skill and the vast encyclopedia of pro looks he’s faced.
“Whenever they’re talking in playbook language, I’m like, I wish y’all would dumb it down so I can have a little bit of this conversation. Otherwise, I’m just sitting here grinning,” Bennett said, describing the universal rookie experience. “But whenever I do ask [Stafford] questions, and it’s me and him talking, he’s good about filtering and knowing what I understand.
“He speaks in my tongue, which has been nice.”
The learning curve is steep, Bennett scrambling to digest new verbiage and acclimate to head set play calls rather than sideline signals, a cue he says “hits your brain [in] a completely different way.”

The caliber of play rises from what he faced in a Heisman-finalist campaign in his final year at Georgia, featuring 4,128 passing yards, 27 touchdowns and just seven interceptions in addition to 10 rushing touchdowns.
The preseason slate beginning this weekend will be a meaningful step toward that acclimation and one that Snead says will better reflect Bennett’s potential than training camp practices.
“Because when you have to tackle Stetson, like you actually gotta get him on the ground?” Snead says. “That’s where you see some of his superpowers come to fruition.”


The road ahead for Bennett​

Bennett laughs when reminded to celebrate the wins amid what can feel like far more frequent waves of frustration. He’s reached a level where he knows what football should look and feel like, but he’s also climbed to a tier where it usually takes time to actualize those visions.
The same difficulties that frustrate him also comfort him because, “I crave discipline. I like to be coached. Like to be told what to do because … if I know what to do, then I do it, you know what I’m saying?
“But then also knowing when you can have that freedom just frees you up.”
He considers similarly the move from Athens, Georgia — where he was hardly low profile — to the enormity of Los Angeles an exercise in both discipline and freedom. There are rules on and off the field. But without a developed character, is there a different freedom to be himself than in his tenure at Georgia?
“I went in there as a teenager and spent six years there,” Bennett said. “You kind of find yourself there and when you find yourself in a spot like that and then you leave, you're like, ‘Oh, man. Was that myself or is that just myself there? So there's this learning curve that goes into it.

“There is pressure and I love pressure to play football.”
Offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur sees Bennett embracing that pressure, the contrast evident between live action and meetings, where “you can see the wheels turning in a good way … because he’s so deep into thought."
“All you had to do is pop on the tape and you just saw — the best way to say it is ‘a baller’,” LaFleur told Yahoo Sports. “He had good fundamentals and all that and a cool system. But you could just tell the game came quiet to him. It came easy to him.”
It continued to come quiet during a late OTA practice when Bennett lined up with the second-team and a play call needed adjusting. Bennett didn’t flinch, correcting the look in a two-minute drill to throw an alert on a corner route that install meetings had not yet covered. He found tight end Brycen Hopkins for a touchdown.

LaFleur thought to himself: “Man, it’s getting more comfortable.”
How soon that comfort will really settle remains to be seen, Rams coaches and front office members not looking to rush the arrival anymore than Bennett is. Bennett knows his NFL career is no guarantee. On one hand, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott rose from fourth-rounder to starter his rookie season, Prescott’s now-eighth year in the role marking the longest active tenure of any NFL quarterback with the same team. On the other: Only 46.9% of fourth-round draft picks since 2000 have ever found a starting role in the NFL. The opportunities at quarterback are fewer and far between than most positions.
Bennett knows what the macro goals are: to win a Super Bowl and to start in the NFL. But he declines to fixate on goals because “I’ve kind of always been, not scared of goals, but I like living life. I like doing the best I can every day and then seeing where it shows up.”
So he eschews specific goals for chronic commitment to improvement, keeping in mind a favorite quote from Georgia head coach Kirby Smart along the way.
“Success,” Smart told his players, “comes to those who are too busy to look for it.”
.
I just don't see Bennett being starting material - however, I think he will be a really good back-up
 

So Ram

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Bennett has the tools is what I think, but time will tell.
train
The Rams have time.It really doesn’t matter at this point either.

Matthew Stafford is The Man.

The last thing I want to do is not enjoy Matthew Stafford as The Rams QB & his career.

What I will say about this rookie QB is he has shown to be better than Wolford & preseason should show that & Rypien is the perfect extra QB with The NFL’s new rule for this QB room.Zac Robinson is going to do a wonderful job as well with this group.
 

OldSchool

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Went into it with Bennett thinking he'd be a good backup and still on that train of thought.
 

Merlin

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Something that may have interesting to only me was seeing Stetson Bennett getting interviewed by Vince Ferragamo and the old wolf Jackie Slater. I compared the level of Stetson's vision compared to Vince's. Jackie is no longer a monster when compared to rookies like Steve Avila and others, but I imagined Bennett trying just see over our linemen while they are blocking defensive monsters on the other side. Developing routes and tricky boy defenders doing safety blitzes and other disguised actions when he's trying to read the field and find receivers hopefully won't be a disaster if he had to step in for Matthew during a real game. Maybe he'll do alright like @den-the-coach always says?
McVay is really good at scheming in rollouts and naked boots and shit. So if we end up needing Bennett I'm sure he'd be fine in a small window. Bigger problem would likely be to what extent he's got the scheme down. Seems like a smart dude so I give him the benefit of the doubt in being our backup. But if he has to play for a longer window of time teams will of course ratchet down on shit and make life hard on him because he's a rook. Gameplans would be "contain him and make him beat us from the pocket" while you focus in the routes he completes the best and start finding his flaws.
 

payote75

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Worst case a good back up best case I see sunshine rainbows a winner a chip and perhaps a Drew Brees....I see the similarities not just from similar builds and stature but maybe cerebral and accuracy as well.

But as mentioned above only time will tell
 

Allen2McVay

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Worst case a good back up best case I see sunshine rainbows a winner a chip and perhaps a Drew Brees....I see the similarities not just from similar builds and stature but maybe cerebral and accuracy as well.

But as mentioned above only time will tell
I hope so but, I don't think the 'worst case' is that Bennett is a 'good back-up'.

We just can not know at this point.
 

norcalramfan

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When is the moderator in charge of “Mood” selections going to offer #13 Bennett? I want mine now!
 

oldnotdead

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I am looking forward to seeing Bennett play. I think he will be okay and as a backup there is no question hes the best they have had for a long time. IMO if he looks good in preseason like I think he will, a couple of things will happen. It will allow the Rams to carry only 2 QBs on the active roster with the 3rd on the PS. That will allow them to carry nine OL on the active roster though they might carry 7 WRs with Smith as Powell's replacement returning kicks.

The other thing that will happen is if he looks good in preseason next year, he will become trade bait. Once the Rams draft their QB1 of the future next year Stetson is going to want out. If he looks good in both preseasons the Rams might get inquiries about him. With the return of fuck them picks next year the Rams might be interested.

As much as the media fawns over him talking about him as Matt's successor, I don't see it. For one he's not McVay's pick and we saw how that goes with Goff. Two he's a gunslinger but he doesn't fit what McVay wants in his franchise QB. He wants a taller, QB1 with a strong accurate deep passing arm. Movement skills are a plus but not essential. The QB must be a pocket passer who even off schedule looks to pass first before running, as such he must read defenses and go through his progressions (full field) quickly. The top QB in this coming draft is Penix who checks all the boxes. So unless they intend to trade for a vet QB in 2025, I see them drafting their next franchise QB. I'm not buying Cousins as their next target. Unless they think they can grab Joe Burrow I don't see another QB FA in 2025 who would be worth trading for.

Trading up for their QB in next year's draft makes more sense as vet backups can be found every year.
 

ArkyRamsFan

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I don't see it. For one he's not McVay's pick and we saw how that goes with Goff.
ond, what do you mean he's not McVay's pick, do you really think Les just drafted him without Coach Mac signing off on it?
I do agree that he was taken primarily to be the backup and that's been my problem with him being taken in the 4th round. There were too many prospects in the 4th round that will be pushing to become starters in the near future to take a career backup.
Backup QBs are best found in the lower rounds, imo.

~ArkyRamsFan~
 

oldnotdead

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ond, what do you mean he's not McVay's pick
McVay himself said very early on that he allowed LaFluer and Zac Robinson to scout the backup QB and that they chose Bennett. Sure McVay was okay with it but it was specifically for the QB2 position not as a future starter for the Rams.
 

Classic Rams

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Waiting for it. :hiding:

If Bennett looks good: "It's preseason calm down!!!" :not::eyeroll:

If Bennett looks bad: "OMG I told you it was a dookie the clown pick!!" :crap: :clown

Go 13!!!!! :fire1::party2: