Los Angeles Rams News and Links for 7/14/25
Kyren Williams and Puka Nacua have been engines of the Los Angeles Rams offense the past two seasons, and it’s expected they will be focal points for a third year in a row, but which player will have the better offensive campaign?
Will Williams being more explosive and have less fumbles leading to his best year?
Will Nacua show that he is top just a two-year wonder, but one of the best young receivers in the game?
Please comment away, happy Monday and thanks for checking out Turf Show Times!
“The Rams feature two elite fantasy studs in WR Puka Nacua and RB Kyren Williams who will be flying off draft boards early. In addition, Davante Adams was brought in to replace Cooper Kupp, which only bolsters an offense that could lead to tremendous fantasy production in 2025 under head coach Sean McVay.”
“Rice, who won Super Bowl XXIII with Walsh, a game where Rice won Super Bowl MVP, used Walsh’s offense under Walsh’s former quarterbacks coach Mike Holmgren to win the crown in 1990. Holmgren was promoted to offensive coordinator after Walsh retired after the 1988 season.
Holmgren then became Green Bay Packers head coach, helping Sharpe win in 1992.
In 2005, Smith won under the direction of offensive coordinator Dan Henning. Henning was an experienced coach, but his offense truly took off in the 80s when he was the OC of the Washington Commanders under Joe Gibbs. Gibbs’ offense comes from Don Coryell as Coryell’s “Air Coryell” passing offense was the blueprint to the modern spread offense.”
“Quarterbacks, they must have an alternate reality,” Arrington said on “Two Pros and a Cup of Joe” on July 11. “They all just sound like a bunch of soft mother F’ers, man. And listen, I can understand what Jared Goff is saying here. But again, this is business. This is business. You can throw out there [that] there should be a level of maturity and different things like that, and it must be a different level of communication and entitlement for quarterbacks. Because it seems like every time I hear a conversation coming from them, it represents something that you would expect if you have the courtesy of the back-and-forth.
“‘I felt like I wasn’t wanted.’ They didn’t want you. That’s why they traded you. If they wanted you, you wouldn’t be traded. So you felt like, what, that you were blindsided by it? That happens to players every single day.”
“Yeah, that’s a really good question. the first thing is who’s the quarterback coach or the...