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Rams’ 2026 Draft Hinges on Ty Simpson

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA – APRIL 23: Ty Simpson of Alabama celebrates after being selected thirteenth overall pick by the Los Angeles Rams during Round One of the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium on April 23, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images)

The 2026 NFL Draft marked a pivotal moment for the Los Angeles Rams as the franchise continues to navigate a post–Super Bowl transition era. Known for aggressive trades and a willingness to sacrifice draft capital for proven talent, the Rams have, in recent years, recalibrated toward a more balanced roster-building strategy. This year’s draft class reflects that shift, with a particular emphasis on long-term stability at the quarterback position. The selection of Ty Simpson stands out as the defining move of their draft.

Ty Simpson entered the draft as one of the more polarizing quarterback prospects. Coming out of Alabama, he demonstrated a strong command of pro-style concepts, an ability to read defenses pre-snap, and above-average arm strength. However, questions persisted regarding his consistency under pressure and his ability to elevate an offense in high-stakes situations. For the Rams, these perceived limitations appear to have been outweighed by his developmental upside.

From a strategic standpoint, the Rams’ interest in Simpson signals a forward-looking approach at quarterback. While the team has relied on veteran leadership in recent seasons, Simpson offers a cost-controlled, developmental option who can be groomed within head coach Sean McVay’s system. McVay has historically excelled at tailoring schemes to quarterback strengths, which could allow Simpson to refine his decision-making while leveraging his technical foundation.

Analysts have noted that Simpson’s collegiate experience in a structured, high-expectation program like Alabama may ease his transition to the NFL (Kiper, 2026; Reid, 2026). His exposure to complex offensive schemes and top-tier competition suggests a higher floor than many developmental quarterbacks. However, the Rams must remain patient. Quarterbacks with Simpson’s profile often require time to adjust to the speed and complexity of NFL defenses.

Beyond Simpson, the Rams’ 2026 draft class appears focused on depth and versatility. Rather than pursuing high-risk, high-reward prospects across the board, the team prioritized players capable of contributing in rotational roles early in their careers. This aligns with a broader organizational trend toward sustainability, particularly as the team manages salary cap constraints and seeks to rebuild depth across key positions.

Critically, the success of this draft will hinge on Simpson’s development trajectory. If he can evolve into a reliable starter, the Rams may have secured their quarterback of the future without the need for costly trades or free-agent acquisitions. Conversely, if he fails to progress, the team could find itself revisiting the quarterback question sooner than anticipated.

In conclusion, the Rams’ 2026 draft reflects a measured yet consequential approach to roster construction. The selection of Ty Simpson represents both a calculated risk and a potential cornerstone for the franchise’s next competitive window. While uncertainty remains, the move underscores a commitment to long-term planning—an approach that may ultimately define the Rams’ success in the years ahead.

References

Kiper, M., Jr. (2026, April 26). 2026 NFL draft grades for 32 teams: Winners, losers, steals, sleepers, favorite picks, classes. ESPN. https://www.espn.com/nfl/draft2026/story/_/id/48547351/2026-nfl-draft-grades-32-teams-kiper-winners-losers-steals-sleepers-favorite-picks-classes

National Football League. (2026). 2026 NFL Draft results and team reports. https://www.nfl.com/draft/tracker/

Still Standing, Needing Help

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON – DECEMBER 18: Kyren Williams #23 of the Los Angeles Rams is tackled by Leonard Williams #99 of the Seattle Seahawks during the first half at Lumen Field on December 18, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Soobum Im/Getty Images)

I keep reminding myself of the most important truth first: the Los Angeles Rams are going to the playoffs. That much is secure. This season is not slipping away. And yet, the Week 16 loss to the Seattle Seahawks still feels like a punch to the gut, because it wasn’t about survival—it was about position, pride, and control.

For weeks, the Rams held the number one seed in the NFC. Not by accident, not by luck, but by grinding through a season that demanded resilience and belief. This team earned that spot. Watching them play for most of that Seahawks game, it felt like they were defending it with conviction. The offense moved with confidence. Stafford threw like a quarterback who knows exactly who he is at this stage of his career. Puka Nacua looked every bit like the cornerstone he’s become. For long stretches, it felt like we were watching a team that belonged at the top.

That’s what made the ending hurt so much. Not panic, not disbelief—just that sinking realization that the grip had loosened. The Rams didn’t fall out of the playoff picture; they fell out of control. When the game slipped into overtime and then finally ended, it wasn’t the fear of missing January football that settled in. It was the knowledge that the number one seed, the one they had protected for so long, was no longer theirs to command.

The Rams are still dangerous. Still capable. Still a team no one should want to face once the playoffs begin. But now the path has changed. To get that top seed back, they’re going to need help. They have to take care of their own business down the stretch, absolutely—but that alone may not be enough. Somewhere else, someone else has to stumble. Another contender has to drop a game. Another result has to break just right. That’s a frustrating place to be when you’ve already proven you can stand above the rest.

As a fan, this is the kind of moment that tests your emotional balance. I’m proud of this team. I believe in them. I know they can win on the road, in hostile environments, against anyone. But I also know how much the number one seed matters. Home-field advantage matters. Rest matters. That extra edge matters. Losing control of it doesn’t erase the season—but it complicates it.

And still, I’ll be there. Watching every snap. Hoping for help while trusting the Rams to do what they can control. Because even with this loss, even with the standings shifting, this team has already shown who they are. They’re in the playoffs. They’re still fighting. And if the road to the Super Bowl has become a little harder, then so be it. Being a Rams fan means believing they can walk it anyway.

Sex Toys on the Court: Misogyny in the WNBA

COLLEGE PARK, GEORGIA – JULY 29: Jordin Canada #3 of the Atlanta Dream drives against Carla Leite #0 of the Golden State Valkyries during the second quarter at Gateway Center Arena on July 29, 2025 in College Park, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

During several WNBA games in the summer of 2025, a disturbing trend emerged: spectators began throwing sex toys onto the court, disrupting play and creating unsafe and degrading conditions for players and fans. The first widely reported incident occurred on July 29, 2025, during a matchup between the Atlanta Dream and the Golden State Valkyries, when a lime-green dildo landed on the court and halted the game (Glamour, 2025; Washington Post, 2025). In the weeks that followed, similar disruptions occurred in Chicago, Los Angeles, Phoenix, and New York, with at least six games affected despite arrests and increased security measures (Andscape, 2025). One incident in New York nearly struck a 12-year-old spectator, underscoring the physical danger posed by these objects (New York Post, 2025).

Law enforcement identified and arrested several individuals connected to the incidents. Delbert Carver, 23, was arrested in connection with the initial Atlanta game disruption, while 18-year-old Kaden Lopez was arrested in Phoenix after striking a man and his 9-year-old niece with a thrown sex toy (Washington Post, 2025; Them, 2025). Both claimed their actions were impulsive pranks. Later, a cryptocurrency meme-coin group took credit for orchestrating the stunts as a promotional gimmick for “Green Dildo Coin” (ESPN, 2025).

While some online commentators framed the events as harmless or absurd, such interpretations ignore the deeper implications. WNBA athletes already contend with systemic bias and underrepresentation in sports media. By introducing an explicitly sexual object into their workplace, these incidents reinforce the sexualization of female athletes and minimize their professional achievements, reducing them to objects of ridicule and harassment. Cheryl Reeve, coach of the Minnesota Lynx, criticized the acts as “the latest version” of the ongoing sexualization of women in sports (Global News, 2025). Andscape’s coverage was even more direct, framing the behavior as a perpetuation of rape culture, noting that a man throwing a phallic object at a women’s sporting event is not comedy but an assertion of dominance (Andscape, 2025).

The incidents also illustrate the interplay between misogyny, viral marketing, and meme culture. In an era where online clout often outweighs human decency, such stunts are engineered for virality rather than protest, turning women’s sports into backdrops for digital spectacle (The Guardian, 2025). As the WNBA experiences rising popularity and visibility, with athletes like Sophie Cunningham drawing growing attention, the behavior can also be seen as a reactionary attempt to undermine women’s empowerment (Glamour, 2025).

Ultimately, these disruptions are not harmless pranks but acts of harassment that threaten both the safety and dignity of athletes and spectators. They signal the persistence of a culture that devalues women’s athletic accomplishments and views women’s bodies as fair game for public ridicule. Respect for female athletes must be non-negotiable, and addressing this behavior requires a collective response from leagues, security personnel, media, and fans to ensure that the court remains a space for competition, not degradation.

References

Andscape. (2025, August 8). Sex toys on the court? This is about more than the WNBA. Andscape. https://andscape.com/features/wnba-sex-toys-on-court/

ESPN. (2025, August 7). Crypto group says it orchestrated WNBA sex toy tosses. ESPN. https://www.espn.com/wnba/story/_/id/45923322/crypto-group-says-orchestrated-sex-toy-tosses-wnba-games

Glamour. (2025, August 8). Throwing dildos at WNBA games has become a trend. We need to talk about it. Glamour. https://www.glamour.com/story/throwing-dildos-wnba-games-trend

Global News. (2025, August 9). WNBA sex toys thrown on court: Coach calls it latest sexualization of women. Global News. https://globalnews.ca/news/11323758/wnba-sex-toys-thrown-on-court-crypto/

New York Post. (2025, August 8). More sex toys thrown during Sky-Dream game despite recent arrests: “It’s dumb.” New York Post. https://nypost.com/2025/08/08/sports/more-sex-toys-thrown-during-sky-dream-game-despite-recent-arrests/

The Guardian. (2025, August 8). WNBA sex toy throwing shows meme culture’s shameful collapse. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2025/aug/08/wnba-sex-toy-throwing-meme-culture-shame-collapse

Them. (2025, August 6). Man arrested after throwing sex toy at WNBA game. Them. https://www.them.us/story/wnba-dildo-atlanta-dream

Washington Post. (2025, August 9). How a sex toy meme-coin hijacked the WNBA. The Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2025/08/09/wnba-sex-toys-crypto-meme-coin-timeline/

Jack Youngblood: The Enduring Soul of the Rams

ATLANTA, GA – SEPTEMBER 12: Defensive lineman Jack Youngblood #85 of the Angeles Rams looks on from the field before a game against the Atlanta Falcons at Atlanta Fulton County Stadium on September 12, 1976 in Atlanta, Georgia. The Rams defeated the Falcons 30-14. (Photo by George Gojkovich/Getty Images)

Jack Youngblood is, in my view, the most iconic player in the history of the Los Angeles Rams franchise. While other names like Eric Dickerson, Kurt Warner, or Aaron Donald often receive deserved praise for their elite play, it is Youngblood who most fully embodies the Rams’ spirit, legacy, and cultural identity. His career, character, and loyalty to the team reflect a rare breed of athlete whose presence is not just measured in statistics but in the profound emotional and cultural weight he carried for the organization.

Youngblood played 14 seasons for the Rams, from 1971 to 1984, never missing a game due to injury during his entire career. His toughness reached legendary status during the 1979 playoffs, when he played through a fractured left fibula—an injury that would sideline most players for weeks. Instead, he suited up and started all three playoff games and Super Bowl XIV, embodying a kind of grit that transcends even the most heroic athletic narratives (King, 2009). This act alone has secured him a permanent place in the lore of the NFL, but it’s especially revered by Rams fans, who view it as a defining moment in the team’s history.

Youngblood’s dominance on the field was matched by his character off it. He was a 7-time Pro Bowler and 5-time First-Team All-Pro (Pro Football Hall of Fame, n.d.). He finished his career with 151.5 sacks unofficially. During his tenure, the Rams defense was a perennial force, and Youngblood was its cornerstone. Unlike other franchise legends whose careers spanned multiple teams or were marred by contentious departures, Youngblood spent his entire career with the Rams, becoming synonymous with the team itself.

His name and image are often invoked in discussions of what it means to be a Ram. In fact, team publications and long-time fans have referred to him as “Mister Ram” (Farmer, 2020). That title is not awarded lightly—it reflects decades of loyalty, leadership, and excellence that left an indelible mark on the franchise. While Dickerson dazzled with speed and Faulk redefined the running back position during the Greatest Show on Turf era, neither matched the cultural and symbolic resonance of Youngblood. Even modern stars like Aaron Donald, as dominant as they are, have yet to fully reach the level of mythos surrounding Youngblood’s legacy.

Moreover, his impact stretches beyond the field and into the culture of professional football itself. Youngblood was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001, and his peers and analysts consistently place him among the most respected defensive players of all time. Peter King of Sports Illustrated ranked Youngblood’s broken-leg playoff performance as one of the top moments of NFL toughness and valor (King, 2009), elevating his legacy into the realm of legend.

What sets Youngblood apart from even the most decorated players is that he represents something greater than his accolades. He is the personification of a franchise that has relocated, rebranded, and reinvented itself multiple times, yet still finds coherence in the image of a man who lined up week after week, season after season, with unmatched determination. For fans who remember the Rams of Los Angeles and even Anaheim, Youngblood is not just a name in the record books—he is the living spirit of the Rams.

In a league where eras fade quickly and heroes are often transient, Jack Youngblood stands as a timeless icon. Not just the greatest defensive end in Rams history, but the soul of the franchise itself.

References

Farmer, S. (2020, September 6). Jack Youngblood reflects on legacy, toughness, and being ‘Mister Ram.’ Los Angeles Times. https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/story/2020-09-06/jack-youngblood-reflects-on-legacy-and-being-mister-ram

King, P. (2009, January 22). The toughest NFL players of all time. Sports Illustrated. https://www.si.com/nfl/2009/01/22/nfl-toughest-players

Pro Football Hall of Fame. (n.d.). Jack Youngblood biography. Retrieved July 25, 2025, from https://www.profootballhof.com/players/jack-youngblood/biography

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