The Athletic Football Show: A show about the NFL - What's next for the Rams and Broncos after falling just short of the Super Bowl?
Episode Date: January 27, 2026Dan Campbell said it best after the Lions lost to the 49ers in the NFC Championship Game after the 2023 season. "This may have been our only shot." No matter how bright a future may appear, there's no... guarantee that you get back to your conference championship game. After falling one step short of Super Bowl LX, where do the Rams and Broncos go in 2026 and beyond? Dave Helman and Derrik Klassen consider what's next for both teams on this episode of The Athletic Football Show. The guys also discuss the recent hires of Mike McCarthy and Jesse Minter.Rundown (timestamps are approximate)4:29 Postmortem for the 2025 Broncos34:59 Postmortem for the 2025 Rams1:07:28 Steelers hire Mike McCarthy1:19:03 Ravens hire Jesse MinterConnect with The Athletic Football ShowPlease take our listener survey: theathletic.com/survey26YT: https://www.youtube.com/@TAFootballShowPodcasts: https://podfollow.com/the-athletic-football-show/viewX: https://x.com/TA_FootballShowIG: https://www.instagram.com/tafootballshowTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tafootballshowDiscord: http://discord.gg/theathleticfootballshowCall us: 847-448-0701Email us: athleticfootballshow@gmail.comHost: Robert MaysCo-Hosts: Derrik Klassen and Dave HelmanExecutive Producer: Michael BellerVideo Producer: Katy DuffyAudio Producer: Michael BellerSocial Producer: Scott KrinchFollow Robert on Bluesky: @robertmays.bsky.socialFollow Derrik on Bluesky: @qbklass.bsky.socialFollow Robert on X: @robertmaysFollow Derrik on X: @QBKlassTheme song: HauntedWritten by Dylan Slocum, Trevor Dietrich, Ruben Duarte, Kyle McAulay, and Meredith VanWoert / Performed by Spanish Love SongsCourtesy of Pure Noise / By arrangement with Bank Robber Music, LLC Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to the athletic football show.
I am Dave Helman.
Robert Mays is out today, but never fear.
Derek Klasson and I have you covered for this week's edition of the Monday morning hangover.
And it is a hangover type of day in multiple NFL cities coming out of conference championship weekend.
Super Bowl celebrations ongoing in Seattle and with the New England Patriots after their big wins
and the sad type of hangover for the L.A. Rams and the Denver Broncos as their seasons come to an end.
That was the focus of this week's post-mortems.
Derek and I breaking down where the Rams and the Broncos go from here.
What can improve?
How can they improve it heading into 2026?
We also touched on some coaching news, some head coaching hires happening since the last time we talked to y'all.
Very loaded show.
Let's get into it.
Well, Derek, it feels pretty fitting that we call these post-mortems because I don't know about you.
I feel like I'm in a slight bit of mourning.
right now in the wake of these conference championship games.
I'm very excited for the Super Bowl,
but it's still two weeks away.
And much like these teams that lost on Sunday,
I really feel myself coping with the end of football season.
I mean, there's one more game left,
but it's not quite the same, you know?
And I'm really,
I'm grappling with the end of all of this for nine more months.
And with these two teams, right?
Like I think some of these other post-mortems we've done,
it's like, you know,
when the Jaguars lose or the Niners lose,
It's like you were pretty good teams.
You were probably never going to win the Super Bowl anyway.
And I think it's a little bit of a different thing.
With teams like the Broncos, especially it having ended for them, like not being able to have
Bow Nicks in this game, and then you don't really get to play like a real fourth quarter at
the end of your AFC championship game.
And then the Rams on the other end being like toe to toe with the Seahawks as the best
team in football for a lot of this season and really being the only team in offense and quarterback
that could really give that Seahawks team hell the way that they did.
for those two teams specifically to be playing no more football.
It does really feel like I'm going to miss not being able to see these teams,
specifically the Rams in their offense and then with the Broncos, their defense.
I'm a little sad we're not going to be able to get any more of them this year.
And we'll get into it,
but the Rams are obviously pushing in a very unique way with the timeline that Matthew Stafford is on.
And like you said,
I mean, it's just a different circumstance with the Broncos where the team that got you to 14 wins is not what you had.
there for that final game. And so, yeah, I'm thinking of this off the dome. I guess Buffalo would be
the other one. Buffalo would be the third team, I think, in this group where you look at the failure to
reach the Super Bowl as a very legitimate missed opportunity. Everybody else, it's kind of like,
all right, well, were you really going to get there with the injuries that you had or the youth on this
team? But these two conference finalists, and I'll throw the bills in there are those are the ones where
I feel like it's going to be stinging for the longest.
Those were the big ones.
And I feel like, too, among the other post-wortons we did, the Bills won when they lost
was probably the longest we spent on that.
Like, you know, Panthers and 49ers, teams like that just didn't take as much time.
Bills took a lot of airspace.
So it's a good one to throw out.
So let's get into it.
Y'all have been doing it the same way all through the playoffs.
We're just going to go chronologically.
The Broncos played the Patriots first.
So that's where we're going to start.
And I remember talking to you about this in August, man.
I wasn't always sold on the Denver Broncos.
And I had my qualms with their offense and their quarterback and how they managed to win some of the games that they won in 2025.
But if we are officially turning the page to 2026, I am pretty sky high about the long term outlook for this team.
Like if we can go ahead and assume that Bo Nix's recovery from the ankle break is going to be okay.
which I imagine that it would be.
There is so much to like about this Denver team that exceeded a lot of expectations,
got better results than I think a lot of us expected from their offense.
And we'll get into it,
but they've already done a lot of the heavy financial lifting for their team.
Like the Broncos locked so many pieces of this roster into place before or during this season.
I know it sucks to lose the conference championship game,
but I head into 2026 feeling like this team is a move or two away from potentially being even better.
And they still don't have to pay Bo Nix this off season.
Like this is only year two.
You can't even pay guys until after year three.
And so that's not really going to be a consideration for them.
Like I do feel like there are so many times where a team reaches this point.
And it feels like, man, they got a little bit lucky to be here.
Like this was supposed to be their year.
And we'll kind of talk about the Rams, I think, a little bit in that way.
But with Denver, this is like, I don't want to say ahead of.
of schedule, but it's usually like teams have to fully max out the credit card to get here.
And that's just not the case with Denver.
If anything, they were maxed out already from all the rough stuff.
And now they're going into this season with pretty good resources in terms of draft picks.
I think they have a couple of extra picks in this draft.
None of them are like super high up in their draft.
But any resources they can have to throw at depth, I think is a good thing because I really
do like look at this roster too.
And there are maybe one or two spots where I would want to improve the starting quality
play like especially with some of the guys potentially leaving like Alex Singleton might leave so you're
probably going to need a new starting linebacker you might need one or new two pieces up front because
you're going to have to change some of those guys maybe you want to add one more thing at wide
receiver but like this to me is like they just need to keep building the depth of this team and they've
got plenty of resources to do it and if they want to take one or two big swings and free agency they're
going to have the money to do that as well so I'm pretty bought in on where this team is going the
infrastructure of it all with the offensive line the head coach
coach, how good the defensive line is. Like, I just, I'm probably going to be buying Denver again next year.
So let's just run through it for the sake of clarity. Your key free agents coming out of this season,
you've got John Franklin Myers heading for unrestricted free agency along with the two linebackers,
Alex Singleton and Justin Sternod. J.K. Dobbins got hurt way back in early November, but he was
sitting on 772 rushing yards halfway through the season. So that's conceivably a guy, you
might be interested in bringing back Adam Troutman.
Not huge counting stats, but played a significant role on this team.
And then you have restricted free agents in Jaquan McMillan, who made the, we'll call it,
controversial interception against the bills.
And then you have Nate Adkins and Jaliel McLaughlin.
So Jaquan McMillan and depth piece is mainly as restricted free agents.
Restricted free agency basically means if the Broncos are intrusions.
in bringing back McMillan, they absolutely can.
You just put a tender on him and it's a pretty easy thing to accomplish.
So I really love John Franklin Myers as a player.
I would certainly be interested in bringing him back if the bidding for him isn't
completely out of whack.
I'm 43 pressures, 7 and a half sacks over the course of the year.
But outside of that, man, to your point, like yes, Singleton has been a good player for
them, but you look at this and say, there's nobody here that we are completely
screwed if we don't manage to hold on to them when the league year starts. And I'll say it one more time.
That is because shouts out to the Broncos front office for getting ahead of this stuff really two
years in a row because during the lead up to this 2025 season, they inked Cortland Sutton,
Zach Allen and Nick Benito. And then during the season, they take care of Luke Wattenberg,
their center and Malcolm Roach on the defensive line. That's during the season. And like I said,
last year, it's Pat Sertan, it's Quinn Miners, it's Garrett Bowles, Jonathan Cooper, and DJ Jones.
Like, they have done an enormous amount of business ahead of time over the last two years.
And that's how you can wind up in a situation where even after a 14-win season, you're sitting here
saying, okay, there's some guys we might like to have back, but nothing that's non-negotiable
when the time comes.
They're not losing any like pro bowl is really.
And like, again, I also love John Franklin Myers.
especially the way that he plays, just like 285 pounds, try to run through your face.
But he's, I don't know, the third, fourth, fifth best player on that front,
which is more of a testament to how good that front is than anything.
And so he to me, and I actually want to ask you this question of the guys that they have
available to bring back, like JFM is, that's the one I, if I have a priority on a guy,
that's the one I want to bring back.
Singleton is tricky because, like, mentally, I think he's good for the defense,
like to have a guy who's been in the defense for that long.
He's played better, I think, this last year than he had in.
in previous seasons, but he's 32, and I think that, you know, how long do you, do you want to
hold that out for a linebacker? That sort of thing. I think it would help them to get a little
bit younger there. The other one, actually, to me, is at Tideon, it's not Adam Troutman. And this is
going to take, like, no amount of money for them to do. But, like, I would absolutely keep
Nate Atkins. I think he's, like, a perfect, you have a depth guy. He's a great blocker. He's
really good as a move piece. Like, those to me would be like, if I'm just in terms of keeping
guys, not necessarily looking outside of the building yet, that's who I want to keep in the building.
that's the it sucks for players but that's the fun thing about restricted free agency is the broncos
can look at Nate Adkins and say we like you we like the job you did you're staying here because
we're going to put a tender on you that's going to keep anybody else from wanting to bid for your services
i i hesitate to speak in black and white terms because it's always going to depend on the price
like if alex singleton can get done for something that's not completely cost prohibitive that's not
going to screw up my overall plan. We can talk. But for me, John Franklin Myers is the only guy on
this list where I'm like, all right, let's try to get something done. We actively want you back.
And to be fair, the Broncos might not even feel that way just because of the resources they've
already allocated. I mean, I just said, DJ Jones and Malcolm Roach have re-uped for sizable
contracts. Nick Benito is in the fold. You've spent a lot of money on the front. So I am curious to see,
not that they don't like JFM as a player,
but do they think they can just throw that many big contracts
at their front and expect everything else to work out?
But I would be willing to,
and if that means I'm replacing Alex Singleton with a draft pick,
I think that's completely fine.
Yeah, like you're going to have to take your medicine
some way in some fashion of like we're just going to not spend here
and get younger.
And so I would rather do that at linebacker
and just keep the front insane.
Because I know we always talk
about like how long the runway can be for young linebackers, but I think that becomes a little bit
less true if the front five in front of you is completely insane and just like always making space for
you. And so I think that that could be a little bit easier. Obviously, whoever that young guy is
would be playing extra Dre Greenlaw as well, which I think would help them a lot. So that would be
how I want to do it. I also did start to look at, okay, in terms of free agency, like trying to get
guys from outside of the building, how would I want them to go about this? Like, what are the things
that I would want from them.
I think they could use some help at wide receiver.
I know they've got like a couple of nice pieces in certain ways,
but wide receiver, I think a free agency is going to be hard unless I really don't
think like a one-year rental for Mike Evans is a bad idea, trying to be something like
the Bengals where you just have these two skyscrapers on the outside, really three, if you
include Pat Bryan in the slot.
Like I think just being such a sized base team when one of the things that Bo Nix will do is
he'll just kind of throw intermediate and deep outside the numbers.
I kind of think that's a fun way to go about it.
And then the other one to me,
I would be more interested in looking at like a running back to pair with R.J.
Harvey, somebody who you think is more stable.
Like I think Rashad White makes a lot of sense for the way Sean Payton likes to run his offense.
Emmanuel Wilson is like a low cost one.
And then the one that might break their bank a little bit,
but I think would actually be fantastic for what they want to do.
Tyler Algear in this Denver Broncos offense, I think would kick ass.
Oh, I like that a lot.
I really, I appreciate how you're trying to find Mike Evans a home outside of Tampa after all of these years.
I feel like that's been a theme.
But it would be fun to see.
But Tyler Algier, as the battering ram player to what R.J. Harvey brings to the equation, I think would be incredibly fun.
I'm just, I'm going to skip to that part in my notes because it's cliche and everybody loves to find receivers and running backs for teams.
and I know there's more to it than that,
but capital letters in my notes is just weapons.
I don't really care how the Broncos do it.
Obviously, Cortland Sutton's under contract.
Harvey and Pat Bryant both had nice rookie seasons,
but that was what we were worried about in August.
Like when we had the initial conversations about
do the Broncos deserve a seat at our championship table
and how high is their ceiling really?
It just didn't feel like the skill position talent was,
was correct for a real deal run at the Super Bowl.
And to be fair to them, they got a lot further than I would have expected.
But my opinion about all of that is completely unchanged.
Like whether it's in free agency, the Broncos have three top 100 picks in the draft this
year as of right now.
I'm trying to use two of those on skill players, if it's up to me.
And like I said, I know you could need a linebacker.
You might need to plug a hole on the front.
I think there are some conversations to be had.
about the age and the depth on the offensive line.
But for a team that was a game away from the Super Bowl,
I'm trying to soup up the skill positions.
And it really doesn't matter to me.
Running back, receiver, even tight end,
they just got to get some more juice on this offense.
I was in 100% the same boat.
Like my notes look almost identical.
The other free agent I didn't even mention in terms of weapons was,
I think somebody like David and Joku could actually be pretty funny in an offense like this
where he's a guy who's a really movable piece.
Great athlete can be used underneath.
but also I think a better blocker than people realize.
And so he would fit a lot of what Sean Payton wants to do.
I think that that could be a fun one.
And obviously,
I don't think the Browns are going to be that pressed on keeping him around
given how good Harold Fanon was.
And they're just in such a transition period anyway that I think he'll probably be able
to hit the open market.
And so that is another one.
And then when I put,
when I tried to layer how I wanted them to handle the draft,
I put it in basically like early rounds.
So yeah, first two rounds.
And then I had like a different plan for mid to late.
But my early round was like, yeah,
I'm thinking running back.
seever tight end, maybe a linebacker.
Like, they really do need, they have a lot of guys who fit roles, right, on the
offense, but they just, I feel like to be a truly great offense, you need two skill
players who can, at a given point, change the game.
And so it doesn't have to be all five guys, but you need two.
And to me, the Broncos really only have one in Cortland Sutton.
Like, he can have these moments where he can really take over, but otherwise it's
guys who are just filling roles.
If they could get one more guy with some pop, whether it's running back tight end,
another fast receiver, whatever it is,
that would I think make this offense feel a little bit more,
a little bit more full,
feel like it has more options going into next year.
It's going to be interesting to see how Sean Payton and George Payton
play this over the next few months because they could be as aggressive as they want to be.
So per over the cap right now,
they list the Broncos at 27 million in total cap space.
About 15 million of that is like effective liquid cap space.
but they can, it is not an issue.
They can trigger as much cap space as they want to by sending out a few emails to agents and restructuring some contracts.
I mean, I listed all the guys that they've inked over the last few years.
So you can play around with Pat Sertan's money, Quinn Miners, DJ Jones, Mike McGlenshi, Talanoa, Hufunga.
Like there is, there is an endless array of guys that you could mess with their money and free up
as much as like $55, $60 million in cap space.
And so how hard do the Broncos want to push?
How comfortable do they feel stressing their cap?
You know, do they want to do extensions with some guys this year?
Do they want to go after some big fish?
Because like I look at this and think, well, you have done such a good job of identifying guys
in house that are worth paying and holding on to.
And they brought in Hufunga and Greenlaw last year.
So you kind of had an active fruit.
agency in 2025.
I don't really think they need to do that.
Like I think a couple smart, moderate signings and a good draft class could get
you where you need to go.
But if you really feel like you want to push this thing, the Broncos could have that
type of offseason if they wanted to and really make a splash when you're talking about
who we're talking about to win the Super Bowl in 2026.
They really could.
And I think, I do think on offense, it's like hard to find who that player would be.
right like the big one for a lot of people at receiver is going to be alec pierce right but that would be
such a huge swing and would pretty much take whatever money that they have this offseason like it would be
that would be their big swing but again that fits into the mike evans mold right where it's like if
bo nix is going to be this guy who does trust his receivers intermediate to deep and is willing to
throw some of these shots um pierce is the best young guy you're probably going to get for that i'm
taking the assumption that george pickens is going to be back in dallas um so like he probably is your best bet
for that. But yeah, whatever it is, I just a little bit more pop on the offense, I think would be nice.
And then a little bit more youth at linebacker. And like, this feels like, obviously, this is super
far ahead, but this feels like a team that will be in the final eight again next year, you know,
just trying to look ahead a little bit. Would you, would you do something that bold? And yeah,
I think it's a good, it's a good guess on your part that George Pickens won't be available for one
reason or another. So that means we're talking about
Alec Pierce. That means we're yeah, we're talking about maybe Mike Evans.
Like does a Romeo Dobbs make sense for this team? Could I interest you in a
Joanne Jennings? Like how aggressive do you think the Broncos need to be with this thing?
I think guys like Romeo Dobbs and Joanne Jennings are good and nice players.
But I think if I'm going to do the wide receiver out, I want like,
the Mike Evans one year rental where I just think he has a much higher ceiling than some of those
players. And so I'd swing for that. Or I would go all the way with the Alec Pierce route being like,
no, we're really investing in wide receiver long term. Whereas I think those other two guys kind of
fit into more of a middle ground for other teams. But I don't know. Like, again, it is hard to
find what the swing would be. So I'm probably more with you. Like, I think this is a roster where
you try to use whatever money you have this office season to patch some holes. You know,
maybe again you mentioned it like some tackle depth i think would be nice like if they sign like if buffalo
let's ryan vandemark go or whatever it is something like that maybe you add like one of those mid tier
stable backs to pair with rj harvey that helps you out and then i would probably take like big
firepower swings in the first round because i do think like you're a lot of teams that are like need
to to reload in some ways in the first round like would need to pick trenches but like i Denver really
doesn't like they have a little bit of flexibility to to take some more of the flashy uh flashy luxury
picks with their first jump pick and I would probably lean that way.
A couple of the things I wanted to hit on.
I guess let's take the full view of this because it can't all be sunshine and roses.
As we're recording this, we don't know right now what the future holds for Vance Joseph.
I haven't heard a ton of buzz about his head coaching prospects, but I have seen his name linked
at least to the Arizona Cardinals job.
He was the defensive coordinator there for four years after.
losing the head coaching job in Denver.
So as of right now, we can't rule out the possibility that he's not there.
Although if he were to leave, the Broncos would get a third round compensatory pick for
their troubles.
So I feel like that's a pretty good spot to be in.
Does like if they were to lose him, does that alter your opinion of this defense or
what to expect they're moving forward?
I would say to some degree, because I think even if I have a good amount of faith that
Sean Payton could find another guy to fill into that role.
I think obviously he's just been around for so long and has typically done a good job of,
I think more recently finding defensive guys.
Obviously had Dennis Allen at the end there and then Vance Joseph now keeping him around.
And it's a really talented defense.
So I think whoever they bring in is going to have a chance.
But defense to me in most cases, there is like a one year workup period where like the first
year of really trying to build in a new defensive scheme.
It's just hard to implement every single thing that you want.
I think about what the Chargers were.
Like the Chargers were a pretty good defense in 2024,
but had some holes, had a couple of things that they just weren't able to maybe call the way that they wanted to.
I think in 2025 they really took a step because it was a lot of the same guys.
And then they were able to, I think, implement some more calls, be a little bit more dynamic on the defense.
And so they would probably lose five to 10 percent of their punch, of their magic if they lost the guy like Vance Joseph.
But I'm kind of with you.
I feel like I don't haven't seen a whole lot of buzz of him going somewhere.
there's only so many spots left open at this point.
I mean, there's only two or three head coaching jobs left.
And I think based on the broadcast of some of those games,
I'm going to assume the Raiders are going in a different direction.
So I don't know.
I think I would be interested,
but I have a good amount of faith that the defense would be okay,
just probably not like the A plus unit they were this year.
Hopefully Tom Brady didn't oversell his hand there on Sunday night.
The other one is in the immediate wake of the Patriots game,
Davis Webb.
is out interviewing for head coaching vacancies.
I saw he was linked to the bills.
But again, talk about a best case scenario.
I mean,
brain drain is always something you have to guard against.
But for a team where the offense is implemented,
scheme called by Sean Payton,
I think you're better suited to lose voices on the offensive side of the ball
better than a lot of other teams would be.
Like, of course, I think you'd rather keep him.
But I'm sleeping a little easier if I'm the Bronco.
than I would be if I were a lot of other teams.
So yeah, that's sorry if I sound like a sunshine pumper,
but for me, this is really just a matter of how aggressively the Broncos want to push this.
They currently have seven draft picks.
They have three top 100 picks.
They gained a fourth in the Devon-Veigh trade with the New Orleans Saints before the season.
They're expected to get a couple comp picks in the spring for Giovante Williams,
and they lost Riley Dixon as well.
So, I mean, you can wind up with.
nine or 10 draft picks. And like I said, you could get an extra third if Vance Joseph does wind up
leaving. We already mentioned the deal with the cap space. The Broncos have all the resources
in the world to improve a team that just won 14 games. Off the top of my head, I guess a couple
other things I think are worth mentioning. What do you do with Ben Powers? I think he's got a year
left on his contract. He missed half the year with, I believe, a biceps injury. Do you want to do
an extension there. Again, are you worried about the long-term depth? This is between Garrett Bowles
and Mike McGlenshy and Ben Powers and some of these guys, this is not a young offensive line.
And I know we keep waiting for- And it's not a cheap offensive line either. So that might be where
you look to try to save some money and find a succession plan. You know, if you want to draft a guard
or sign a younger guy to come in, I think that makes a lot of sense. But I really feel like we're
nitpicking here, man. I feel like the Broncos.
Broncos are going to return all but a very small handful of starters from a very good team.
And yeah, they pick.
So they pick 30th in the first round.
I think their draft position is finalized.
Find yourself a couple skill players.
Find yourself another linebacker.
And I'm saying, let's cook, man.
Like I'm sky high on what this team could be in 2026.
Yeah, I'm with you.
I know there's going to be some regression talk of,
oh, they won all these close games and the comebacks.
but like the roster is still good regardless of all that stuff.
And they've,
they've got plenty of resources to continue to make it better.
Which I was about to move on.
But before we do that, let's let's talk about it briefly.
We've had plenty to say about Bo Nix.
The good that he's done,
we've been plenty of him as well.
Year three,
let's just assume the Broncos find a couple ways to upgrade the talent around him.
What is, uh,
what,
what is your reasonable expectation for where this could go? And I mean, like, what you got out of
Bo Nix was already good enough to get you to the conference championship. But how much more do you
hope or think Bo Nix could grow, especially, I think it's worth pointing out. This is not the most
talent-lated offense, at least skill player-wise, in the NFL. I mean, how much higher can Bo Nix take
this thing, do you think? Yeah, I'm, I mean, I've gotten a lot of stuff from Brockham's fans.
over the last handful of most of the year.
I'm not the biggest Bo Nix fan.
I think even of some of their success,
I'm still not.
He's just like not,
to me,
a super load-bearing quarterback.
And so in my mind,
I struggle to see this ever being
like an elite offense with Bo Nix.
But I think that they can be like
the eighth best offense
with a guy like Bo Nix.
I think especially too,
like if they bring in skill talent
at wide receiver that fits what he does.
Because I think when I think about a guy like Bo Nix,
he still does not like to throw a lot of the middle of the field.
You have to kind of coax him into doing that.
It's a lot of like five yard and under, or we're throwing these deep shots out outside the numbers.
You know, Robert and I have talked about a number of times.
There's a lot of overlap with what Jalen Hertz is for the Philadelphia Eagles.
And Nicks currently is a much better athlete than Jalen Hertz's.
And so I think that certainly helps them a lot.
But I think trying to build like that style of offense, which I think is why at times you've seen the Denver offense,
try to be more of a run-heavy approach, even though it's never really been quite as good as it
has been with the Eagles. And so I think they can get to, again, if they make a little, like,
if they get one more wide receiver I like and maybe they upgrade the tight end room a little bit,
I could totally see them being like the ninth best offense in the league last, or next year.
Because this year they were hovering around average for most of the year and it ticked up
a little bit towards the end of the season. But I would say like eighth or ninth like that back
end of the top 10. That's kind of what I would hope for if they make the upgrades we want.
I'm so glad you brought up Hertz. So I don't have to be the one that broaches the subject.
But I'm going to throw you my agnostic take here because I trotted this out in the summer
and I got pushback and I get it.
It's not very interesting if we're trying to like fairly evaluate the hierarchy of
quarterbacks and who's actually the best in the league.
I said it last year.
It doesn't really matter how good Jalen Hertz is if you have,
if you prove you can win a Super Bowl with him.
And like it's not fun for the content creation.
and the people that make lists and do TV and us.
But that's all that an NFL team should care about.
And I do think Bo Nix is a good enough player to win you a Super Bowl,
particularly if you continue to upgrade the offensive talent around him.
Like, I don't give a shit if he needs two pro bowl receivers and for all pros on his
offensive line.
Like, if that's going to get a trophy in the case, that's really all that matters.
And I think what I learned about Bo Nix this year is that he crosses that threshold for me.
Even if I don't think of him as an upper echelon quarterback, considering you can't even talk to him about an extension until after next year.
And then whatever you wind up paying him isn't going to matter until a few years after that.
You can build a juggernaut around this guy.
And I will point out, Derek, look, the Eagles have managed to do that with the way that they spend resources and the stuff.
that they can do with their salary cap.
The Broncos have Walmart money, man.
Like the Denver Broncos can absolutely surround this guy with a juggernaut of a team.
And does that mean Bo Nix will ever be a top five quarterback in the NFL?
I wouldn't bet on it.
But he could absolutely win a Super Bowl.
I think that's what I learned about Bo Nicks this year.
And that's what I would be trying to do if I were the Denver Broncos is surround him with enough talent to make that a reality.
that's the thing, a quarterback of his caliber,
it's not that you can't do it,
it's just in my mind,
like he can bear less of the load
and then the roster has to be great,
but the roster already is great.
They proved that,
like, if not again,
for a snowstorm and Beau busting his ankle,
they probably do get to the Super Bowl.
And I think, like,
we're going to preview Seahawks Patriots and all that stuff.
My early impression is that I think the Seahawks
blast the Patriots in that game.
I think the Broncos would have stood a much better chance against
this Seahawks team because I just think
they're a much better roster top to bottom.
And so if we're already saying that and the Broncos have the ammo to theoretically make this a better roster, you know, maybe none of those moves hits.
However, we think that's going to happen.
But they theoretically could be a better roster than they already are now.
I just, yeah, he crosses the threshold, even if I think for me it's like by an inch.
Hey, it's like Dom Torretto said.
It doesn't matter if it's by an inch or by a mile.
The Lombardi trophy is.
what matters in this league. So I'm, I am very in on the Broncos and I'm excited to see just how hard
they want to push it this year. And real quick before we finish up, it's, it's just, it's worth
remembering, you know, heading into this season, it was the Chiefs Division until proven otherwise,
and the Broncos ceiling was as a wild card and all that fun stuff. And, man, talk about kicking those
doors down. And yeah, I mean, I don't think the chiefs are going to go away quietly, but this team
has proven that they can win the AFC West. They can be a big time factor in the playoff picture.
And like you said, I would expect that to continue in 2026, no matter what they do in the offseason.
All right. We're going to take a quick break. And right after that, we will dive into the L.A. Rams.
All right, Derek, it's it's all optimism and sunshine and roses for the.
the Denver Broncos, I feel a little more existential with the Los Angeles Rams.
And I mean, I think that that comes into play when you have a quarterback who's about to turn 38 years old.
And we talked about it in the immediate aftermath of the game.
I mean, we know what was on the line.
You could see how badly Sean McVeigh wanted this game.
Did you, did you happen to see?
Did you see the post game where Sean McVe, I mean, he was fired up taking questions from reporters
after that game.
And I think he was asked about Stafford's future.
And he was like, yeah, if he wants to play, like, what the hell kind of question is that?
Do I want Matthew Stafford back?
And Stafford very eloquently said, I can't generalize six months of my life in 10 minutes,
which is totally fair.
But those questions are going to have to start getting answered very quickly because how we feel
about the L.A. Rams moving into 2026 hinges almost entirely.
on whether you get one more year of Matthew Stafford or not.
That's what makes this complicated because I think if he comes back,
I'm actually not as doom and gloom for 2026 as I thought I was going to be.
Like they're really not really up for losing that many pieces.
They have a little bit of financial flexibility if they want.
Like draft capital-wise,
they obviously have two first-round picks.
And I think with some of the positions that they potentially need,
like maybe you want a new tackle.
Rob Havenstein is older and he's going to be a free agent.
I think they really need to upgrade.
at corner linebacker at least by my early view it seems like this is a good class for all of those
things and they've got first round picks at those spots so like obviously when we did some of
this exercise like three months ago it was like oh well they can just trade both of those first
round picks and one of them's going to be the ninth overall pick and they can move that up and go get a
quarterback that's probably out of the question at this point given it's most likely seems like a
one quarterback class unless they really love tie simpson or something like that and so um in terms
of like the future there's some doom and gloom for the Rams.
But if Stafford comes back, man, like this roster is mostly going to be intact.
And maybe Devante Adams falls off the cliff.
Maybe Stafford falls off the cliff because of his health stuff.
You know, he was, I think he'd even at some point joked this year that he was healthier
than he thought he would be dislaid into the season.
But if he comes back some plays, man, like I know we're doom and gloom about what this season
was and how it ended.
But like, they could still win 12 games next year.
And it would not be, it would not shock me whatsoever.
If football was played in a.
vacuum, I would be buying all the RAM stock I could find. And I say existential very intentionally
because my concern with the Rams, like you just alluded to, is how much do you want to bet
it goes this well again? You know, like just because we were wrong about Matthew Stafford's
health heading into the season doesn't mean that that was a misguided fear, right? Like for him to get
through this campaign and the finger injury that he suffered in the Carolina playoff game is like
as bad as it got for him does not mean it's going to go that way if he comes back. I mean, the
list is long of players that have come back for one more go around and I will get over the top
next time and it doesn't always go as beautifully as you want. I mean, if Matthew Stafford wants to
come back. Absolutely. You take that chance and you try to overcome it anyway, but it's just a lot of
unknowns. And if I had to guess, we're going to, just like we did last year, we're going to get the
answer to this sooner rather than later. Stafford's got one year remaining on the deal he worked last
year. I believe there's a $40 million guarantee very quickly after the new league year. And honestly,
if I had to guess, if the guy wins MVP, I mean, even if he doesn't, considering how he played,
he might want to rework that deal anyway.
Like even at the age of 38 and not knowing for sure that he wants to play another year,
if that's what he decides,
I would very easily expect a yesterday's price is not the same as today's price
sort of conversation in order to come back and do this all over again.
I would too.
Yeah, you win the MVP.
Even if you don't know if you're coming back next year,
you get to say and ask for whatever you want.
So I would be doing that if I was him.
I do think the quarterback thing is fascinating though because I think like let's say Stafford leaves and let's make the assumption that McVay is not going to want to draft anybody just because the roster is already really great and it doesn't seem like a very deep quarterback class.
I really don't know what kind of guy they want to go after.
Like do they just keep Jimmy around and let him run the offense for a year?
Do they go and sign like a Gino Smith?
Do they try to get like something like that?
Do they bring in a Mac Jones?
I truly don't know what they would obviously Mac Jones would probably not happen because you would have to trade for him.
But like I just don't know what McVeigh would even want.
Like the only one that I if I was doing like football science experiment, I do think of Malik Willis in a Sean McVeigh offense would be incredible because we've never really seen him have an athlete at the position like that.
You know, he toyed around with it a little bit with John Wolford at the end of the Jared Yoff era.
But I think that was a little bit of a different caliber that we'd be working here with Malik.
Willis.
So for starters, Jimmy Garoppolo is a free agent as well.
So if the Rams wanted him back, at this point in his career, obviously you could sign him.
That's not a big deal.
But you would have to bring him back.
Otherwise, we're talking about Malik Willis.
We're talking about Marcus Marietta and Russell Wilson.
Oh, my goodness.
I mean, I don't, Russell Wilson is an absolute no-go in the Sean McVeigh offense.
I guess, like, I mean, what?
you want to talk about no go how about Aaron Rogers how does that strike your fancy oh god that sounds
terrible going from somehow having 38 year old Stafford and then potentially getting older at
quarterback would be crazy I don't love these options man I really I don't know this is there I got
got I got nothing backing this up this is pure gut feeling but I just think you got a you got to
find a way to to run this back and like and you know with the way staff
With the way Stafford played, I don't think it should be that hard of a sell.
I mean, to get that close to the Super Bowl and to play at that level.
And I mean, you've got one year remaining on your deal anyway, even if you want to alter it and give him a pay raise or whatever.
Yeah.
I mean, like it just feels like the most logical conclusion.
And the season went well enough that it's easy to imagine Stafford not wanting to step away.
And so it just feels like that's what has to happen.
Otherwise, yeah, I mean, like you're probably talking about resigning Jimmy Garapolo
and maybe looking for a quarterback you can draft and develop.
If not in the first round, then somewhere along the line.
And that's just nowhere near as exciting as gearing up to try to do this all over again
with the potential MVP.
Well, and that's the thing that why I would really want to bring Matthew Stafford back,
is it frees up what you can do with your draft capital.
I really do think that this is like a great opportunity for the Rams to address some of the positions that I know what they, how they've handled corner and how they've handled linebacker for such a long time is like a very clear top down.
This is how we build the team thing.
This also needs to be like a, we've seen, for a long time, we said, oh, the Eagles only build their teams in certain ways.
And then they went out and spent a bunch of money on Saquan Barkley and then spent a first round pick on a linebacker.
Like teams can change who they are just like as years.
go on and they can learn lessons and be like, okay, we don't always have to build our team this way.
Building it that way might have worked five, six years ago, but we don't have to continue doing that.
This to me would be a very good like, okay, we were this thing for seven, eight years.
Let's try to build the defense a different way, especially as we saw in that playoff game,
like them not having quality linebackers and cornerbacks absolutely killed them against a team like
the Seahawks.
And so I think them sitting at 13 and 29 with what should be available at some of those positions,
including as well as tackle.
Like I just,
this feels like such a good pivot.
Let's kind of make the health of the roster a little bit better.
Try to run it back with Stafford one more year.
And then we can do our transition.
Like that just seems to me like the best way to go about this
instead of fiddling around with using one of those top,
you know,
60 picks on a quarterback and trying to develop them.
So for the purposes of this conversation,
let's just,
we'll put a pen in Stafford and just say that
in three to six weeks,
we're going to get a Michael Jordan,
I'm back graphic on social media,
and we're going to run it back.
Let's just assume for right now that that's going to happen.
And we can take one more look at the alternative in a minute.
But let's just assume that's going to happen.
Outside of that big existential threat,
to your point,
the future looks pretty bright in L.A., man.
Like outside of not.
having the most important position in the NFL for the long term.
Over the cap projects the Rams at $30 million in effective cap space this year, which
ranks them just inside the top 10 at number nine in projected cap space for the coming
league year.
That's cool in all.
Derek, do you know how much cap space they're projected to have in 2027?
No, late on me.
like pushing up toward 180 million dollars.
That's the benefit of having a young defense that's already this good.
There's no real money invested in this team outside of the 38 year old quarterback and the 34
year old receiver.
Like, Alarick Jackson's on a pretty big deal.
They re-signed Kairn Williams a little while ago.
Kevin Dotson's on a fairly big deal.
But after that, you're talking about mid-tier signings.
and rookie contracts like all the way down.
The Rams have so much room to play with.
And it's so perfectly timed because there are a lot of big deals I would expect to get
handed out soon.
Pooka Nakua is officially eligible for an extension.
Kobe Turner, Byron Young, Steve Avella, all are coming up on contract eligibility.
And then he's not eligible right now, but I would go ahead and guess they're going
to be earmarking money for Jared Verse.
So that money is going to get spent, but the Rams are a little bit of a blank slate in a very, very good way.
Like they can load this roster up and finding a quarterback is easier said than done.
But even outside of the Stafford thing, you could be in a very enviable situation for future quarterbacks who step into this roster in the near future.
And that's the other thing that makes this like where they're at with the draft even better.
Like you don't, there's going to be some teams that their front is so good, but maybe they really need to reload.
And they've got guys that are coming up on contracts or they're old and they've got to replace them.
Every Rams front four guy or their pass rush is all like 26 and under and still already on contract.
They don't have to worry about that.
They can go and spend some of these picks on other luxury positions.
And so again, like this to me is something I really hope that they do.
I know that like I'm, this is going to be the most wishcasty thing that I say probably this entire segment.
and it's really the only draft take that I have so far.
A guy like Sunny Stiles playing behind this front,
it could change everything because it's not just that he's a great athlete,
he's long.
He, when I watch that Ohio State defense,
the way that he communicates and gets people set is like,
if you could implement that level of like communication and soundness and heart
in the middle of that defense behind that front,
holy shit, man, this defense could be incredible.
Like they need to spend on those positions so they can do that.
You're speaking my language right now.
Okay, let's stick on that vein.
And I mean, Sunny Stiles is incredible.
We'll get you on.
Unbelievable.
Building the beast to gush about Sunny Stiles.
So here's the interesting thing about where the Rams stand.
You mentioned Rob Havenstein as an upcoming free agent,
not to diminish him and what he's accomplished.
The only remaining St. Louis Ram, by the way.
So that's just a fun thing you have to bring up when you mention.
when you mentioned Rob Havenstein.
But the play of Warren McClendon makes that a little bit less of an emergency for me.
Tyler Higby's headed for free agency.
And then the big one that I really want to talk about, Cam Curl, Kobe Durant,
Roger McCreary and Akello Witherspoon are all headed for free agency.
Now, obviously, you can sit there and say, well, most of those guys need to be replaced.
The Rams secondary is a big part of why they're not gearing up for the Super Bowl.
right now, but you do still have to do some work there. Like you've got to enter into 2026 with a
functional secondary. Do any of those guys strike you as bringbacks? Because I have at least one take
that I want to fire off. I would love to keep camcour. I love the way that he plays. I think he's an
ass kicker. I think he's better even as a deep safety than I thought he was going to be when they
signed him. Like he to me, I think that like safety room between him, the way that Kinchins has played
at times this year as a young player. And then Quentin Lake being like your hybrid third safety,
kind of a nickel, kind of a big linebacker. I like the middle of the secondary there.
To me, the corners were tough. But like kind of to your point, sure, we can say they probably
need to replace Kobe Durant. They probably need to replace Darius Williams. You look at the free agent
market. It's like a lot of these guys are older or like Jamel Dean is coming off a good year, right?
but he's been on IR a lot over the last two years and he's creeping up on 30.
And then your next best options are guys like Josh Job, who I think is solid, but is really
ideally like to me like a cornerback too for most teams.
And so I just, this to me again is like to go back to the draft thing, they need to
wield that draft capital on those positions that they don't normally target because like
they're just set up so well to do it even though if those are not swings that they would
normally take.
And that's how I landed on the idea of I think Cam Kerr,
is a good shout.
Depending on price, I'd be happy to bring back Kobe Durant.
And I feel like people are going to roll their eyes at me if they watched the playoffs
because it was a rough final three or four weeks for the Rams secondary and for Kobe
Durant.
But I'm trying to create a situation where Kobe Durant is my CB2.
And if that's the case, I can live with that.
Like, that doesn't bother me at all.
And I think so if you bring him back.
if you bring curl back, I think those deals would be relatively affordable.
You can cut Darius Williams and save $7.5 million against the cap and make this more palatable.
Emmanuel Forbes is under contract for another year.
So you've got that in your back pocket too.
Because the alternative, like you said, I mean, Jamel Dean, how about Rick Wullen?
Would that strike your fancy after Sunday night to try to bring Rick Wollin to the L.A.
Rams. So that would be cool. I would also, if Seattle lets him walk, they would be crazy. So,
but if he's on the open market, I would be paying the money to do it. Absolutely. The only other
ideas I came up with were Resil, Rassul Douglas is coming off a nice year in Miami. He's turning 31 this
year. Or you could try to make a buy, low, sell high gamble on Trayvon Diggs and hope that
time removed from injury combined with Rams culture.
gets you a little bit of bang for your buck,
but I don't necessarily love those options
a whole hell of a lot more
than just keeping my own
and trying to draft to upgrade the talent there.
That's what I want to do,
because again, this is a team that has almost never seriously invested
in corner, really since the Jalen Ramsey trade,
and even then he was more of a nickel for them.
They have really not invested in an outside corner,
and so many times it's led them to this same spot
where the front is cool, maybe the safeties are cool,
maybe the defense is called well, and you just cannot cover people.
Like that is just no way to live in the NFL.
And I think at a certain point, they need to have a little bit of like a come to Jesus
moment and try to get a serious outside corner.
And so, again, one of those first two, one of those two first round picks, to me,
if the right guy is there, should be a corner.
So I think it should line up relatively well.
They have the 13th overall pick thanks to the James Peer with the, thanks to the James
Pierce trade with the Falcons.
Mansoor Delane is a name that I think Rams fans should know.
He's arguably the best corner in the draft.
The only question is,
does the importance of the position push him too high for your pick?
Then I think you would probably have to look at the two Tennessee cornerbacks,
Jermad McCoy and Colton Hood,
Avion Terrell out of Clemson.
There should be a guy available to you at number 13.
I would also push really hard for Caleb Downs in this spot.
The only thing that gives me pause is that the Rams just signed Quentin Lake to fill a similar
role, you know?
So I don't know if you can find room for both of them, but I'd be willing to try because,
I mean, Caleb Downs is going to be this year's Kyle Hamilton.
Like if you're not caught up on the draft process yet and you're just getting your feet
wet with the prospects, Caleb Downs is that dude.
And so I think a lot of defenses are going to be eager to try to,
join the cutting edge by drafting Caleb Downs.
That almost does seem like a glutton of safeties,
but he at least in,
I haven't studied him specifically,
but in watching styles,
some of the plays that Caleb Downs is making,
he seems like one of those prospects that it doesn't really matter
who you have there on the roster right now.
He's probably worth considering.
And so if I was the Rams,
it might be fun.
That actually brings me to another point I wanted to make.
It's the same thing for the Broncos.
as of right now, if we're looking for potential problem spots, again, we're recording this late Monday afternoon.
Several big name Rams assistants are still up for various jobs, and that includes Chris Shula,
although it's starting to feel like the Rams might be able to hang on to Chris Shula.
And I started feeling that way Saturday when the Pittsburgh Steelers announced that they were hiring Mike McCarthy.
We'll talk about that in a minute.
but for the purposes of this, all of a sudden you look around,
the giants, the dolphins, and the Steelers have all filled their jobs.
Those are three jobs he was linked to.
He reportedly turned down a chance to interview with the Browns.
And so now I'm sitting here, like, unless the Buffalo Bills want Chris Shula,
or I guess potentially the Raiders, if they don't hire Clint Kubiak,
I'm sitting here thinking, oh, man, we could keep Chris Shula.
And I do not give a shit how bad the Rams defense looked in the playoffs.
would be very, very happy to retain Chris Shula and try to upgrade the back end.
Like I'm not out on Chris Shula at all, despite what the playoffs looked like.
No, me neither.
That to me was just like you run into the best teams for a gauntlet in the playoffs at a certain
point.
You're probably going to be out talented.
And in the back end, they absolutely were.
But I still think Chris Shula is a really good play caller.
His vision for the defense makes sense.
So, yeah, again, if he doesn't get hired away in the next two weeks, I'm pushing even
harder to get Stafford back, man.
Like, if we could really run it back with everybody, like, why would we not?
Like, I, I think that that would be incredibly exciting.
Like, it almost seems if a Rams, uh, if a Rams staffer gets hired away, it's not going
to be him.
It's going to be one of the offensive guys.
I was going to say that's the other thing.
Our wonderful colleague, Diana Rusini, reported Monday that the, the Browns flew out to
L.A. to try to lock in with Nate Shieldhouse, their passing game coordinator.
and offensive coordinator, Mike LaFleur, is a candidate on Arizona's short list.
So that's all we have to go on right now.
I would imagine, I mean, like one of those three guys is going to be gone in 2026.
Like that just feels like a law of averages type of thing.
But you're right.
If you manage to hold on to everybody, now we're just making Stafford ungodly offers.
Like, are you really going to walk away from all of this?
Like the chance to bring all of this back for one more go around?
I don't think so.
There's no way.
Okay, a couple other things I wanted to hit on.
And that's, I mentioned it.
There's two guys on this team making an ungodly amount of money.
Devante Adams just turned 33 and finished with his lowest reception and yardage totals since 2015.
He did lead the league in touchdowns, 14 on the year.
Is that enough to run it back with Devante?
I think you could free up $14 to $18 million.
by moving on from him.
And I guess if Stafford were to retire, maybe this changes my answer.
But A, Devante Adams, even now, is still a hell of a player.
And B, I almost feel like that is a package deal.
Like, if Matthew Stafford comes back, I assume he's going to want Devante Adams on the
roster.
I'm in the same boat.
Like, especially if Stafford comes back, like, I absolutely want Devante Adams back.
And I would, like you said, I would assume part of the swaying Matthew Stafford
to come back is the idea that Devante Adams will also be back. And so again, he's not the same
player that he was two, three years ago. And I think we even saw, actually, he was great in the
playoff game, but I think for the handful of games before that, you could see any little
nagging injury he had was a little bit of an issue for him because he's a little bit older now. And I
think he isn't quite as explosive as he used to be. But when you have Pukunakua already being the
star of the offense, you have a good running game. You have a quarterback who can make these
throws to other guys.
Like, they really did just need Devante Adams to be their, like, key in the red zone and
really unlock some of that one-on-one ball.
And then every now and then give you a chunk play over the middle.
And that's what he was.
And so unless he fully 100% hits the cliff next year, like, he's going to be back and he's
going to be a very effective player for them.
And so I would still want to add, like, maybe another guy in the third, fourth round or
whatever in the draft to try to supplement and start build something behind him.
But I don't think you need to replace.
place Devante Adams. I'd rather just have him there.
There's a lot of pressure that comes with being a Super Bowl or bus team, but there's also a lot
of clarity because if we're a young team trying to build for the future, it's like, okay,
like, do we need to spend $18 million on the 34-year-old receiver? Is this good for our long-term
outlook and our long-term cap health? When you're pushing to try to win a chip for a 38-year-old
quarterback, it's like, what the fuck are you talking about? Of course, Devante Adams is on
this team. So that's kind of like that. Yeah, that's that's where I fall on it. And I do, I do think
that's a valid point. It's it, it starts not to matter, especially when you discover 13 personnel and
lean into this multiple tight in world that the Rams were in over the second half of the season.
But they paid two to two at well, $10 million to catch six passes this year. And Conada Mumfield had a
very nice rookie season. And I was very impressed at the trust that they put in him as a,
day three rookie on an offense with all of these highly paid, highly successful, highly famous
players, I still think you could stand to upgrade that. And maybe, maybe it's a first round
pick that feels kind of over the top. But hey, who knows? But at the very least, I think that's
something where you could try to address the depth and the youth of your receiver room.
But that actually is a really great point, though, about the 13 personnel stuff and with just
how much they run the ball, like, this is not Devante Adams having to be in an offense where they're throwing 700 times.
Like, they're going to be able to give him rest and kind of work him out.
Like, he doesn't need to be the workhorse that he was like three, four years ago.
So how deep are you into looking at any draft prospects?
Just barely.
I've only started with, of course, linebackers because I'm a little bit of a caricature of myself.
And I've only like seen three or four of those guys, which I will say,
this linebacker class looks awesome.
Like these guys kick ass, man.
And so that's really all I've started with,
but it's a good start.
The linebackers are fun.
I'll be interested to see how that ages from that perspective
where you look at it and I looked at this and said to myself,
Nate Landman and Omar Spates is probably good enough
considering how the Rams value linebackers.
And if they upgrade the talent on the back end,
but it would be really fun if they bucked that conventional thinking and just through a first round
pick at yeah, Sunny Stiles or CJ Allen.
I mean, there's no shortage of really fun linebackers that you could plug into this thing
that would supercharge it.
I think I'd have to see it to believe it, but I would be very okay with it.
I would definitely have to see it to believe it too.
Like Dave, a linebacker in Corner, like I said, they just have never really invested
there.
I mean, they let they had a good one in earnest job.
Jones and they were just like, you can go. And I know that he had some injury problems,
but they were just like, yeah, you can go. Like, it's crazy that they just don't really invest
in that position. But again, people can change, front offices can change. I would like to see a player
like Sonny Stiles behind this front. The reason I initially asked you is because of the toxic take
that I'm currently gestating heading into the draft cycle, which is the Rams have discovered 13
personnel. I know Davis Allen had a nice year, but Tyler Higbee is a free agent, and the Rams
have the 13th overall pick. We know they like Brock Bowers a couple years ago, and I'm just like,
ooh, what if they wanted to draft Kenyon Sadiq, the star tight end coming out of Oregon,
and like supercharged the hell out of 13 personnel? It feels completely superfluous and
unnecessary and they just spent a big pick on an Oregon tight end last year, but it would get me
pretty excited even if I don't think it's totally necessary. That's one of those, dude, if you're
telling me that you could give Sean McVeigh a new shiny toy for this and do this thing on
offense that nobody else is really doing, sign me up. I don't care if it's a dumb idea and you're
not supposed to take tight ends in the top 15, whatever. I don't care. I don't care.
The like Sean McVeigh trying to resist the devil on.
his shoulder because the Rams could very much be in a scenario, thanks to having this 13th overall
pick where you've got a very good DB or linebackers sitting there available to you, but also
potentially the top tight end in the draft or one of the best receivers in the draft. I saw
Daniel Jeremiah mocked Mackay Lemon to the Rams in a mock draft this morning, which go watch that
guy play, Derek, and tell me you don't want to see what Sean McVeigh could do with McKay
limit in his offense. So I love the idea of the Rams trying to be responsible and beef up their
defense while sitting in a draft range where they could draft a lot of very shiny toys for Sean McVeigh.
But isn't that the value of having two first round picks? You know, if you really want to mess around
a little bit with one of them and then eat your vegetables with the other. You're so right. They currently
own eight draft picks. The headliners that they have two in the first round, but they've also got,
They lost a fourth last year in a draft day trade.
One thing I just, I wanted to mention because I think it's fun.
So they did the trade with Tennessee at the deadline to get Roger McCreary.
And the compensation in that trade was just giving back what they gave each other in the Ernest Jones trade.
Like they did those, they did that trade in 2024.
And then a year later, they were like, all right, you just want to give us back that five and we'll give you back that six and call it a day.
like that's basically what happened so everybody wound up with their original stuff swapping two players
which i think is really fun and yeah i think they're they're expected to get a comp pick or two
uh so i mean it's it is a full draft class headline by two first round picks and the only question
for me is are you gearing up for one last shot with matthew stafford or do you have to pivot
and could this be a team that's interested in somebody like tie simpson or are you
we looking at the Rams evaluating guys like Drew Aller and Garrett Nussmeyer as like day two
quarterbacks with with high upside and I just I'll just be honest I don't want to live in that
world I want I want one more year of the Rams pushing to get this thing over the hump I think
everybody but NFC West rival fans wants that it's just better for football in my opinion it's
it's way better and that's where I'll end I think this is I'm going to operate under the
assumption that Stafford's coming back. Maybe that's reckless. Maybe that's wrong. That's just the world I
want to live in. And if I live in that world, the Rams have plenty of resources to be the best team in football
again, like to be that caliber of team. So that's the world I'm living in until they, they show me that
that's not where we're at. That's what existential dreads all about. I'm just going to handwave the
stuff that makes me uncomfortable until I'm forced to confront it. And that's what I'm going to do
with the L.A. Rams. They're probably going to do the same thing. Like, hey, Matthew.
you take three weeks and let us know and we'll try not to think about it too hard until then.
All right.
We're going to take one more break.
And then real quickly, we're going to catch up on some coaching news before we're out of here.
All right, Derek, a couple coaching things we wanted to hit.
I alluded to it earlier in the show.
We debated doing an emergency pod on Saturday because it felt emergency worthy when the Pittsburgh
Steelers announced on Saturday that they were.
hiring Mike McCarthy, which, you know, it's funny. The common logic was that the Steelers are
going to zig when everybody expects him to zag. And Mike Tomlin was a 35-year-old unproven assistant,
and Bill Cowher was the same. And so we expected them to do completely something completely
unexpected. And we're still surprised when that's exactly what they did. Because even though he's
from Pittsburgh, I just, I never saw the Steelers basically opting for another Mike Tomlin,
because that's what I think Mike McCarthy is, is a very similar hire to what they already had.
And I was expecting outside the box.
And so to get something so inside the box still managed to be very surprising, even though
it was a very famous coach getting the job.
I don't want to hear it from anybody.
Like, when you fire Mike Tomlin, this is what you're asking.
asking for is to get is to land in a spot where you feel like your best option is Mike McCarthy and so
here's here's kind of my process with it I Mike McCarthy is 63 years old I think what we saw from him
in Dallas was at times okay but I think the offense this year without Mike McCarthy under Brian
Schottenheimer was better and again I know they added George Pickens and that's part of it too but
like the run game was better the offensive line was better I thought the overall plan and cohesion was
more modern and it was just a better offense and so I think that that's
there's that element of it.
But so much of the justification in people's minds before Tomlin got fired was that they just
kind of need to go out into the wilderness for a little bit.
They need to be bad.
They need to just like not be a team that is consistently competitive.
I think because McCarthy has done this before, there's some level of like, I don't think
this team will fully bottom out, which is maybe what they needed.
But I really do not think that they're going to reach quite the heights that.
they were able to reach like really scraping nine and ten wins out of this roster
with Mike Tomlin,
especially now that the defense is getting much older and going to continue to be very
expensive.
So like this to me feels like I know they gave them a five year contract.
This to me feels like a deal that by the end of year three,
they've won a combined like 20 games and they really haven't accomplished a whole lot.
They finally scrounge together a couple of picks that are in the top 12.
and they've started to reload the roster
and they're ready for whoever's next.
And so if the whole thing of like firing Tomlin
as we take this little reset period
and we go on to the next guy,
I don't, I feel like they'll end up accomplishing that
with the Mike McCarthy hire in like a roundabout way.
Doesn't that feel so uninspiring?
It feels extremely uninspiring.
But like I, again, I think when people wanted Tomlin gone,
like they wanted this.
And so I think it's going to look bad.
It's going to feel bad.
And like it's, I again, I don't think they're going to
to bottom out and just be like suddenly the worst team in the league or anything. But like, I think
they're going to be a team that fights between six and eight wins every year instead of eight to
10 or 11. And I think that'll probably run dry after like three years. And maybe along that process,
you find a quarterback that like maybe Mike McCarthy can help develop a little bit, but just like the rest
of the roster doesn't feel like you want to continue to see out this five year contract. Like this to me,
like if I'm playing out the story in my head of what I think this is going to look like,
it's that's probably where we arrive.
Here's where I land with Mike McCarthy and I covered him for three years in Dallas.
I respect what he's accomplished in the NFL and I will, I'll go to bat for the idea that
he is a much better head coach and has a much better track record than a lot of people
want to give him credit for.
Like it's strange to me that he is a punchline considering everything that he's accomplished.
I mean, 185 wins in the NFL, a Super Bowl.
He won 12 games, three consecutive years with the Cowboys, which obviously those seasons
fell woefully short in the postseason.
But given the Cowboys' recent history before Mike McCarthy, consecutive winning seasons
was a big step for an organization that couldn't string together consecutive good seasons
to save its life.
So I respect a lot of what Mike McCarthy is about and has done.
And my thing is, Mike McCarthy feels like a guy for the Giants or the Tennessee Titans
where being a competent organization has gotten away from you a little bit.
And you need somebody to come in there and lay a ground floor and an expectation of,
this is what a successful NFL program looks like.
This is what it's like to win games.
This is what we expect of you.
The Steelers were already there.
The Steelers already did all this.
Like, their rosters loaded with guys that have been to the playoffs most of the last four or five years.
And the whole point was getting to something new and refreshing.
And I don't really buy that at this point in his career, Mike McCarthy is going to give you something different than what we were already watching with Mike Tomlin.
And honestly, I think it's kind of ironic.
the whole thing with the Steelers is once they get to the playoffs, they look like they don't belong.
And Mike McCarthy's Dallas teams fell on their faces by and large in the postseason.
I mean, the lingering impression that McCarthy left with the Cowboys was that beatdown that the Packers put on them when they were the two seed in the 2023 playoffs.
And I guess you can never rule anything out for sure, but it's hard to imagine.
at 62 that he is going to bring something that is tangibly better than what we were already
watching the Steelers do, especially when you consider the quarterback situation and the fact that
you're talking about either restarting with another young guy or wooing Aaron Rogers back,
which I don't know if McCarthy being there is an attraction or a deterrent at this point in that
relationship.
but it just doesn't feel like the ceiling is a whole lot higher
than what we've already spent the last few years watching.
It doesn't.
Like firing Tomlin to go with McCarthy,
who kind of just feels like an offensive version of what Tomlin is.
But again, like I'm probably in the same boat
where I think he's some amount of diminished version of what Tomlin offers you
in terms of being like the CEO,
everybody's going to kind of be on the same page
and everybody's going to be put together.
And then I think if there was some other rationalization
for having let Tomlin go.
It was like, regardless of how good Tomlin is, we just need new ideas.
We need a fresh set of eyes in here, all that stuff.
I could get that.
I just don't get that person being somebody who's 62, 63 years old and like probably
towards the end of their coaching career.
Like that part of it also doesn't make sense to me.
Like that to me should have been, again, somebody who was a little bit younger,
maybe potentially.
Like I just, there's really no beat of this that makes a whole lot of sense for me in terms
of the Steelers realizing a ceiling that.
they didn't have before under Tomlin.
If I was looking for copium,
and I think you kind of touched on it,
and that's where I would go,
I think a fair amount of the
hype that McCarthy gets for developing
quarterbacks is a little bit overstated.
You know, like in the wake of this news,
you saw a lot of people
plugging the fact that he
developed Aaron Rogers and Dak
Prescott. I feel like that's a little overstated.
Dak Prescott was a 5,000-yard quarterback before Mike McCarthy ever took the Cowboys job.
But he still has a track record of working with quarterbacks and getting good results out of
quarterbacks.
Like that is fair to say.
So if Mike McCarthy takes this job in his hometown and doesn't embarrass the Steelers while
helping them find and identify a young quarterback and turn the roster over and, you know,
you move away from some of the veteran players on on your team like a cam hayward like potentially
maybe a t-j-watt i mean how does mike mccarthy's presence affect what the future may hold there
and if he helps you identify and develop a quarterback that the next coach can work with in three
years maybe this could be okay like that would be my generous interpretation of this because i do think
at the end of the day, I would, I'd be surprised if this was a Pete Carroll situation where it just
completely falls apart. Like, I think Mike McCarthy can maintain the Steelers' aura of being
a competent winning for the most part organization. Now, whether that should be the Steelers'
priority is a different question. But I do think he's capable of doing that.
I agree. I don't think this is going to fall apart nearly to the same degree that like the Pete Carroll
thing in Vegas.
And if for two reasons, one, he's a little bit younger and I just don't think that he's
going to have some of the issues in terms of putting together the coaching staff the way that
Pete Carroll did with like, you know, one of his sons being the offensive line coach.
And then Chip Kelly like kind of seemed like a weird situation there with him being the
offensive playcaller.
I just those parts of it, I don't think are going to be an issue with McCarthy.
And then also, even if there's issues with the Steelers roster, it's not nearly as bad
of a roster as Las Vegas.
And so it shouldn't bottom out to that degree.
And so I just again, this too.
me is I'm not sure what the ceiling is, but to your point, like the sell is that at some point
over the next two years, if he can draft the quarterback and you get some amount of faith that that
guy can be an average, like above average to like a pro bowl level starter for you with or without
McCarthy, that is probably a win for whatever this regime is going to look like.
It's funny to think. And I don't know this. Maybe the Steelers really were locked on McCarthy
this entire time, but the Steelers are renowned for their.
patience and their process and the way that they do these things. And maybe you hire Mike McCarthy
just to get it out of the way and don't wind up in a situation where you're waiting two more
weeks to hire a head coach. But to hire McCarthy on Saturday and then on Monday have Chris
Shula, Nate Shealhouse, Davis Webb, Vance Joseph even, like all of those guys available to you.
I don't know. I feel like at the bare minimum, you could have waited 48 more hours.
because I don't get the impression McCarthy was getting another job.
Like the Giants and Titans jobs were filled already anyway.
I think you could have waited and talk to a few more guys
before you pulled the trigger on this.
But maybe the Steelers were just that convicted.
I guess that's a good point.
I don't know who else they were scared of taking McCarthy as the job.
Like Arizona seems like a weird fit.
Like I guess Buffalo, but I don't know if I would have seen that either.
I think I'm comfortable making that risk and saying,
all right, let's see who we can talk to on Monday
and if we lose Mike, we lose Mike.
But that's not the way they went.
The other big news, actually in that division as well,
I think we all guessed this would happen
and had an idea of what happened,
but the Baltimore Ravens made it official with Jesse Minner.
They hire the Chargers defensive coordinator
to be their next head coach.
There's no guaranteeing it's going to work,
but you hire a guy that shares that much DNA with Mike McDonald
after letting Mike McDonald leave the building.
I completely understand the thought process here.
And I will gladly take my chances that mentor can achieve similar results with the
talent and the infrastructure on that Baltimore roster.
Well, and so this is what I was talking about with like the Steelers thing of like part
of why maybe you would fire Tomlin is like Tomlin's still a good coach.
But maybe we just need like a fresh set of eyes, just a different guy kind of running the ship,
even if it's a little bit of shared DNA.
That to me is exactly what's happening with Baltimore.
John Harbaugh, still a good coach, but it just felt like they'd maybe run out a road with what that had been.
It had played out for almost two decades.
Let's get a fresh shed of eyes.
But I think this is an organization that has always kind of tried to abide by a lot of the same systems and structures.
And Minter, having been familiar with both of the Harbaas, obviously coached at Michigan.
He was in Baltimore for a while as an assistant.
He has some of that shared DNA knows how the organization wants to run.
But then we've also seen him calling plays on his own at the NFL level.
obviously with the charges.
And I think he's done a fantastic job.
Like when he took over the defense at first in 2024,
they had a couple of their issues, right?
Like they,
I thought they were a little bit bland
with some of their pressures at times
just in terms of some of the coverages
they were throwing on the back end.
I think they were up and down
in their ability to maybe defend the run
out of some of the looks that they wanted,
given that they're more of a too high defense.
I thought this year all that stuff looked better.
Like I thought the linebacker play,
like what they got out of like Denzel Perryman at his age
and this year I thought was pretty incredible.
The front looked better than it had ever been.
You saw development from young players like Tui,
Tui Poloto, which I thought was really impressive.
It just felt like his vision had really coalesced as a play caller.
And so if we can bring back some of that,
which I think what we saw was some of the drop-off from like the 2023 peak Ravens
when McDonald was there, is like,
you had this elite, incredible defense.
And then you just had MVP Lamar Jackson on the other side,
that you had this complete team because of that.
I think they lost a little bit of that this year because they just, you know,
Zach Orr, I think is a fine play caller, but just I don't think was up to that level.
If they can get back to being a top seven, eight defense in terms of the structure and how it's called with a guy like Minter,
and then you still have Lamar Jackson, like hopefully a healthier version of Lamar on the other side,
this is going to be one of the favorites in the AFC again.
Like, I know it's not a perfect roster, but they will absolutely be one of those teams again.
we've talked about this over the last week or so with Robert.
And I hear you where like having a Josh Allen or a Lamar Jackson, I think gives you a margin of error with your hire.
I still want to see who Jesse Mentor hires to call his offense because, and to be fair, Mike McDonald did not have Lamar Jackson when he got to Seattle.
But he had to make a change at OC after one year because it just wasn't working as smoothly.
as well as they wanted it to.
And he landed on a grade higher in Clint Kubiak.
So the margin for error is bigger with Lamar Jackson,
but I still want that to be a really good hire.
And I'm just curious to see how it goes.
Because on the defensive side of the ball,
I just, I don't really have that many questions.
Like, again, with what he's done on his own
and what he has in common with what the Ravens have already done,
I don't have a lot of questions about how well that's going to work.
but even Lamar Jackson can benefit from good coaching and good play calling.
So that's just the one question that I have.
And I think that's fair.
Like we all, before he got signed to funny enough, the Chargers,
I think a lot of people wanted Mike McDaniel to end up there,
which I think obviously would have been incredibly fun.
I got to say, though, like I, the play calling is going to be important.
I'm more curious to see how they fix the offensive line and like get that back to being
like a real ass kicking unit.
That to me is where I think this thing can go from the offense feeling.
like Lamar Jackson can be an MVP again.
To me, it's not like the play calling will matter,
but like if that offensive line gets back to where it should be,
that to me is a little bit more important.
We'll see how it goes.
I mean, the news is flying fast and furious.
Mike McDaniel withdrew from the Buffalo conversation.
He is officially the Chargers offensive coordinator.
The Packers hired Jonathan Gannon to replace Jeff Halfley.
The Cowboys hired Christian Parker as their defensive coordinator.
John Harbaugh tapped Dynard Wilson,
formerly of the Titans to be his DC.
That's just a few of the moves.
And the dominoes are going to keep falling.
So we'll just,
we'll reserve that for a later conversation
once the smoke is a little bit clearer.
But until then, that's all we got.
We appreciated so much.
We have so much content coming y'all's way.
The draft cycle is starting to gear up.
So Dane and I have you covered on Building the Beast.
I think we got a mailbag with
Robert coming later this week, Derek.
And then we're off to Santa Clara for Super Bowl 60, man.
I cannot wait.
And we will talk to you all real soon.
We appreciate it.
