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 by Flash
2 days 12 hours ago
 Total posts:   1256  
 Joined:  Jan 13 2016
United States of America   Houston
Pro Bowl

Good article from ESPN on McVay.

https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/445 ... ante-adams

Sarah Barshop
Apr 10, 2025, 06:00 AM ET

LOS ANGELES -- Davante Adams waited for the video from Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay to load, wondering if his Wi-Fi was broken.

It was early March, and the then-free agent wide receiver was in Japan on vacation before the start of the new league year.

When the clip finally loaded, Adams realized why it had taken so long. It was a seven-minute video filmed by McVay, who recorded it by holding up his phone to show film of Adams while he narrated the highlights.

"It was kind of Jon Gruden-esque a little bit," Adams said. "You know how he is with ball so he's breaking down every single clip. ... I thought he took that job to be on TV for a minute when I was watching it.

"It just shows how much ball means to him and how much of a priority I was for him and the rest of the guys here because it's not just him making those decisions. When you have that from a coach, you're on the free market and you don't see it from anybody else to that level, it means a lot."

Adams laughed when asked how he would describe McVay as a recruiter, saying, "Aggressive, but in all the right ways."

"I knew this," McVay said at the NFL's annual meeting this month. "When I sent him that video, he's either thinking one of two things: 'Man, I like this guy or he's freaking whacked.' And probably both, but he decided to come with us, so we'll take it."

McVay, now entering his ninth season as head coach of the Rams, has not only built a reputation as a great football mind, but has built a culture that has led to players wanting to come to Los Angeles. Not only have several players -- including quarterback Matthew Stafford -- taken less money to return to the Rams this offseason, but McVay has been able to recruit players like Adams to come play for a team constructed with a Super Bowl in mind.

"He is a good recruiter, man," backup quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo said. "He's a smooth talker, [has] high energy, which I really enjoy. I love Sean. Every day he brings that same energy.

"I love being here. It all starts with him, and it trickles down from there."

Not long after the 2024 season ended with a loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in an NFC Divisional playoff contest, McVay, general manager Les Snead, team president Kevin Demoff and vice president of football and business administration Tony Pastoors went to Meadowood in Napa Valley, California, for "an after action review," according to McVay.

It was there the group talked about the short- and long-term vision of the team, the players who would be free agents and other potential moves. The group discussed Cooper Kupp "a lot during those couple days," ultimately deciding to move on from the wide receiver, either with a trade or a release.

The Rams had also "identified early in the process" that Adams was likely to be released by the New York Jets and be available, and McVay began picturing what Los Angeles' 2025 offense might look like.

"Through the process of talking to Davante, even if it was globally, Sean found someone he could connect with on a very intellectual level," Demoff said. "... I don't think you can replace Cooper Kupp's leadership in what he's meant in that room, but I do think you can have someone who can bring a different flavor and perspective will be great.

"But I do think there's always been, whether it's Matthew Stafford, Brandin Cooks, Ndamukong Suh, Sammy Watkins, you can go through the litany from the beginning of the Sean-Les relationship is when they identify a need and there is a ability through a trade or free agency to go get it, they're going to be pretty aggressive.

"And sometimes you try to pull the reins on them to stop, but usually they do a pretty good job of breaking free and usually it works out for us."

McVay doesn't wine and dine you, Snead said.

"He recruits in a way of 'Here's what I think your superpowers are as a football player, here's how I think we can use them, and this is how people have defended you in the past,'" Snead said. "'This is how I think we can help you avoid that defense. And we're trying to do something special here.'"

That recruiting pitch worked on Adams, who said in his introductory news conference "after speaking with a couple of players, Sean and a couple of the other personnel, it was clear that this was where I needed to be."

The Rams signed Adams to a two-year, $44 million contract in March with $26 million guaranteed.

Snead said McVay's recruitment helps him during contract negotiations as well.

"There's times where the agents go, 'I just can't stand the way this is going because my player's saying that this is where we're going so, we might as well quit playing games and try to work something out,'" Snead said.

Garoppolo, who signed a one-year deal to serve as backup quarterback in March 2024 because he wanted to play for McVay, said last season in Los Angeles "exceeded [his] expectations." The quarterback explored the free agent market and had other opportunities, but said he knew where he wanted to be.

"I've been in a couple of good organizations, [have] seen how things are run, and Sean [McVay] does it top-notch here," Garoppolo said.

Garoppolo was a player the Rams hoped would return in 2025, but one who they thought had a good chance to sign for more money elsewhere. When asked about McVay's recruiting pitch, Garoppolo said, "Every time I talk to him on the phone, I say like 10 words. He's talking so fast, in a good way though. It's his high energy.

"He has a point to make and I love that about him. There's no B.S.-ing around."

Nose tackle Poona Ford, who played the first five seasons of his career with the Seattle Seahawks, said he "always watched [McVay] from a distance" during the two games the teams played a season and he "always knew he was a guy that I could see myself playing for at some point."

Ford said his recruitment to the Rams "kind of happened really quick."

"They were really aggressive in the process, and I just felt like this was where I needed to be," Ford said.

And ultimately, the Rams have had a winning track record under McVay, going to two Super Bowls and winning Super Bowl LVI during the 2021 season.

"If you are a football player who really, really cares about playing good football and you want to be a part of an ecosystem that wins," Snead said. "... I always go, oh, it's recruiting, but it's really Sean really explaining to them, 'Hey, this is our ecosystem. This is how we do things and if you want to be a part of that man, we'd really love to have you. And if you don't, we'll always pull for you and try to ruin your day if we play you.'"

 by snackdaddy
2 days 9 hours ago
 Total posts:   9978  
 Joined:  May 30 2015
United States of America   Merced California
Hall of Fame

That fateful day back on Jan 12, 2017. I don't know who was ultimately responsible for making the decision to hire a 30 year old head coach. Who pounded the table for him. But that decision was a franchise altering decision. Turning a woeful franchise into am elite franchise where veteran players want to come play for him.

I remember when he was first hired. I thought WTF? Who is this guy? 30 years old? Did they hire him to be Goff's buddy? No, they saw something in him and had the wherewithal to take a chance on a young, energetic coach who is also extremely intelligent. His brain was built to be a football coach.

 by ziggy
2 days 7 hours ago
 Total posts:   695  
 Joined:  Apr 24 2018
United States of America   LA Coliseum
Veteran

Here's a story of how it went down.



I don't know if there are other perspectives, but Marshall Faulk claims he was one of the last voices in the decision...

 by Dare
2 days 3 hours ago
 Total posts:   680  
 Joined:  Mar 09 2024
United States of America   Tucson, AZ formerly of San Diego
Veteran

Thanks for the read.

This is exactly why I know that the key to the Rams is the partnership of Snead and McVay. Players will come and they go, but it all starts and ends with the synergy that those two create in the organization. Now add in an owner like Kroenke who understands when you have a pair of prized stallions you just give them their head and let them run.

Stan remains as the strategic planner and implementor, but allows Snead and McVay to handle the how and why everything gets done. My hats off to Kroenke who understands the dynamics of how a successful business is run.

Never take these 3 for granted. We as Rams fans are blessed that this team has these three to guide and run things. Winning in the NFL starts at the top.

Stan took over the ownership of the Rams in 2010 and hired Snead in 2012 to run things and to develop a winning culture. The final piece was McVay hired in 2017.

Stan needed Snead, Snead needed McVay. This is why I know as long as these three are running things, the Rams might be occasionally down but never out.

 by Flash
1 day 16 hours ago
 Total posts:   1256  
 Joined:  Jan 13 2016
United States of America   Houston
Pro Bowl

And the genius of McVay in wanting to work with Snead. Remember Snead's head was on the chopping block also it was Snead who said, after the dinner, that he'd buy stock in Sean McVay.

Between Demoff, Pastor, Snead and McVay Stan has created the ultimate team that's on the same page and work great together. Kuddos to Stan!

 by Elvis
1 day 11 hours ago
 Total posts:   40986  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

Back in olden times, the GM was the HCs boss. The GM decided what kind of team you were gonna be, hired a coach to do that and told him who his players would be. They used to say a GM gets 3 HC hires to get it right.

Is there even one team that still operates like that? (Besides the Cowboys.) I mean i'm sure there was always some collaboration but it's way more 50/50 nowadays and if anything, i think HCs have more power, on average, than GMs in today's NFL...

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6 posts Apr 18 2025