It may be the end of Kyren Williams season. Might he be done with the Los Angeles Rams too?

“I Was Anticipating It!” Rams running back Kyren Williams shares his confidence for a breakout season.

Because Kyren Williams performed the small things well, the Los Angeles Rams selected him as a running back out of Notre Dame. He might not have been dynamic enough to be given a starting role and he wasn’t going to regularly earn them chunk plays, but he would hit the holes he was meant to and perform his pass protection duties.

Reports: Rams RB Kyren Williams could miss four weeks | Football |  kdhnews.com

Williams was an afterthought to those outside the building during his first season, which saw just 35 running attempts due to foot surgery and an ankle sprain. Running backs selected late in the draft who don’t perform well in their first seasons aren’t particularly in demand.

Yet, Williams’ willingness to do the dirty work, and his effectiveness in doing so, earned him the trust of head coach Sean McVay. In his second season, it was clear that the relationship was helping him push for snaps. Incumbent starter Cam Akers was dealt soon after, clearing the path for Williams.

Los Angeles wouldn’t regret it. Williams would turn in a Pro Bowl-caliber season and helped fuel one of the league’s most feared offenses. At the all-star event, he spoke about the ascension so few saw coming. “I would say I expected it because all I wanted coming into this year was a chance,” Williams said. “And I knew if I got a chance that I was gonna do what I do. I knew that I was this type of player and I just needed a chance to show it.”

Williams turned his chance into one of the most impressive campaigns of the 2023 season. He would miss four games due to injury and another due to rest in Week 18. He still turned in 228 attempts for 1,144 yards and 12 rushing touchdowns. He would add another 206 yards and three scores through the air. No running back averaged more yards per game, helping land a Second-Team All-Pro selection that was as justified as it was surprising considering his status before Week 1.

“And coach McVay gave that shot and put his confidence into me,” Williams said. “And as a player it allowed me to feel good and just be who I am.” Just who he is happens to be an excellent NFL running back. Among the 44 ball carriers with at least 100 carries, no one averaged more expected points added per rush than Williams. He created big plays more than anyone saw coming while retaining the traits that put him on the field in the first place.

That’s a recipe for success, and in McVay’s offense, it means touches will come in bunches. Williams is no longer anonymous, and with the performance to justify the confidence he’s had all along, there’s little reason to expect anything less than a stellar season in 2024.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*