
McInnes, McGlynn and Naysmith nominated for SPFL manager of year
Derek McInnes, John McGlynn, and Gary Naysmith nominated for SPFL manager of the year!
The Los Angeles Rams selected Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson with the 13th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, stirring drama around current QB Matthew Stafford. Coach Sean McVay has downplayed Simpson's selection, while Simpson claimed he had never met McVay or GM Les Snead.
Mentioned in this story
When youâre based near Hollywood, maybe veering into the theater of the absurd is inevitable. But if the 2026 Los Angeles Rams want their bizarre spring trailer to signal a winter blockbuster, then they might want to add one more plot twist to the script.
To summarize the past few days, the Rams â probably the clear-cut, second-best team in the NFL in 2025 (and just barely shy of the top spot) â surprisingly chose Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson with the 13th overall pick of the 2026 NFL Draft. Then coach Sean McVay, admittedly, went out of his way to downplay Simpsonâs selection (multiple times in various interviews) in deference to the Rams' current QB1, league MVP Matthew Stafford. Then, even after being tabbed, Simpson claimed heâd never met McVay, nor previously spoken to GM Les Snead. THEN Snead admitted that Simpson had been less than truthful ... on the Rams' behalf.
Got it?
The first round of the 2026 NFL Draft brings franchiseâdefining moments as teams make their selections from the top of the board.
The Rams selected Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson with the 13th overall pick.
Matthew Stafford's position as the current QB1 has been downplayed by coach Sean McVay following the draft.
Ty Simpson claimed he had never met coach Sean McVay or GM Les Snead prior to being drafted.
The drama stems from the unexpected drafting of Ty Simpson and the mixed messages from the Rams' management regarding their quarterback plans.

Derek McInnes, John McGlynn, and Gary Naysmith nominated for SPFL manager of the year!

Cerezo: 'Hay que meter un par de goles y para casa' antes del Arsenal
Dan Orlovsky discusses the challenges of critiquing QBs more successful than himself.

Join FC Bayern's fight against blood cancer: Register as a stem cell donor!
Pistons down 3-1 to Magic, facing elimination in playoffs
Unai Emery discusses Onana's fitness and semi-final match against Nottingham Forest.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
See how picks 1 through 32 came off the clock as the next generation of NFL talent enters the league.
1 / 32
The first round of the 2026 NFL Draft brings franchiseâdefining moments as teams make their selections from the top of the board.
See how picks 1 through 32 came off the clock as the next generation of NFL talent enters the league.
1 / 32
The first round of the 2026 NFL Draft brings franchiseâdefining moments as teams make their selections from the top of the board.
See how picks 1 through 32 came off the clock as the next generation of NFL talent enters the league.
2 / 32
3 / 32
4 / 32
5 / 32
6 / 32
7 / 32
8 / 32
9 / 32
10 / 32
11 / 32
12 / 32
13 / 32
14 / 32
15 / 32
16 / 32
17 / 32
18 / 32
19 / 32
20 / 32
21 / 32
22 / 32
23 / 32
24 / 32
25 / 32
26 / 32
27 / 32
28 / 32
29 / 32
30 / 32
31 / 32
32 / 32
âIt was shocking. But it was shocking only because we were thinking about the L.A. Rams being a right-now team,â said NFL Network draft analyst Bucky Brooks, a former scout in the league.
âThey were one player or so away from being able to close the gap on the Seattle Seahawks and overtake them. People say theyâre the second-best team in the league.â
Co-signed. And co-signed.
The cloaks. The daggers. The kid gloves. The heel turns. The opportunity cost. Wild.
And aside from confirming his involvement in this season's production during âNFL Honorsâ in February, when he was announced as the league's 2025 MVP, Stafford hasnât even had his first scene in this apparent thriller â though the leading man of the Ramsâ latest big-budget undertaking should have a word, and maybe already has, with its executive producers.
If you didnât pay close attention to the draft and simply checked to see which players went where, then you probably came away at least partially mystified that L.A., which was probably two or three plays away from advancing to Super Bowl 60 â whether it was that wild, overturned two-point conversion in Week 16âs overtime loss at Seattle, or the muffed punt and defensive lapses that (barely) sunk them on the same field in the NFC title game a few weeks later â chose Simpson.
Then McVayâs public pooh-poohing immediately afterward elicited such a reaction, even from his inner circle, that he was compelled to explain it the next day.
âFor any of the questions or misunderstandings just based on my demeanor or disposition last night, I did want to get that out of the way,â McVay said April 24, while reaffirming his bond with Snead, who wound up answering most of the questions about Simpson on draft night.
âThat was brought to my attention because I got so many texts. That was never my intended way to be able to come off, but sometimes I can be a little grumpy.â
Yet then he immediately doubled down on his support for Stafford, who was the primary subject of his messaging in the aftermath of the Simpson pick.
âI couldn't be more excited about being able to add (Simpson) but also understanding how much I love Matthew Stafford â how respectful you want to always be and to the way things can be interpreted," McVay continued. "The demeanor would've been stoic by nature because you are excited, but ⊠it is Matthew's football team.
âWhat a blessing it is for (Simpson) to be able to learn from Matthew and to be able to come into this atmosphere and environment. Whenever that time comes for him to get an opportunity to be Matthew's successor will be on Matthew's terms. I think that's really what the important thing was.â
Sean McVay talks with Matthew Stafford during the NFC title game in January.
His public silence still intact, Staffordâs true feelings on the matter are purely a matter of conjecture. But McVayâs inclination to bend over backwards to express appreciation for him seems at least somewhat telling â particularly since there were numerous players (G Vega Ioane, TE Kenyon Sadiq, WRs Makai Lemon, KC Concepcion and Omar Cooper Jr. et al.) who seemingly could have contributed significantly to a team seemingly perched to win the Super Bowl in SoFi Stadium for the second time in five years at the end of the 2026 campaign.
âThe approach of planning for the future is wonderful and all, but I donât think Ty Simpson is anything special. Thereâs a Ty Simpson every year (in the draft),â former New York Giants vice president of player personnel Marc Ross, now an NFL Network analyst, told USA TODAY Sports. âHis track record, with the lack of starts, his size â thereâs nothing really about him (to like).
âItâs just odd in all kinds of ways. ⊠And there wasnât a big market for teams getting Ty Simpson, especially at 13. Wow. That was insane to me.â
Yet you also have to feel for Simpson on some level, both given McVayâs priority on being sensitive to Stafford and also the fibs the rookie told while trying to adhere to the Ramsâ pre-draft wishes that he not divulge his lengthy meeting with them. Simpson said heâd never met McVay nor spoken to Snead after being chosen, which was categorically untrue.
âSean, thereâs no way he would pick a QB without meeting him,â Snead said April 28 on âThe Pat McAfee Show,â performing more minor damage control in the Ramsâ post-draft media blitz while copping to the meeting with Simpson and defending him in the wake of the âgamesmanshipâ the Rams asked him to practice prior to April 23.
âTy stayed on script, we were really trying to keep it from other teams. ⊠Poor guy, heâs so earnest â thatâs what heâs doing.â
Will the QB depth gambit ultimately be worth it?
Rossâ approach with the Giants was to target players early in drafts who could help Eli Manning win immediately, then worry about quarterback contingency plans later.
âThey werenât first- or second-round picks. Kinda under the radar, we took quarterbacks every year,â said Ross, âbut it was worth trying to take guys who were really good backups and hope we hit more on them.â
Ross is now wearing a pair of Super Bowl rings, both the 2007 and 2011 Giants very much bolstered by rookies and young players.
And while succession plans are great in theory, Brett Favre didnât reach another Super Bowl with the Packers following Aaron Rodgersâ arrival ⊠nor did Rodgers after Jordan Love was taken in the first round in 2020. Kirk Cousins didnât get the Falcons to the playoffs after they took Michael Penix Jr. in the first round just a month after Cousinsâ arrival in free agency in 2024 (but, Atlanta, ya know).
However both Favre and Rodgers went to NFC championship games with their high-profile understudies on the sideline. Think Roddy White, drafted after Rodgers, might have put Green Bay over the top? Think Justin Jefferson, who was in striking distance in 2020, or Tee Higgins would have gotten Rodgers to his second Super Bowl?
Whatâs the takeaway for the Rams as Lemon and Cooper â both seemingly from central casting as it regards to the receivers the Rams value â prepare to play elsewhere?
Snead already knows. â(Bleep) them picksâ â which is exactly what he should do next.
OT Tytus Howard: Traded to Cleveland Browns (previous team: Houston Texans)
CB Trent McDuffie: Traded to Los Angeles Rams (previous team: Kansas City Chiefs)
RB David Montgomery: Traded to Houston Texans (previous team: Detroit Lions)
WR DJ Moore: Traded to Buffalo Bills (previous team: Chicago Bears)
1 / 4
OT Tytus Howard: Traded to Cleveland Browns (previous team: Houston Texans)
1 / 4
OT Tytus Howard: Traded to Cleveland Browns (previous team: Houston Texans)
2 / 4
CB Trent McDuffie: Traded to Los Angeles Rams (previous team: Kansas City Chiefs)
3 / 4
RB David Montgomery: Traded to Houston Texans (previous team: Detroit Lions)
4 / 4
WR DJ Moore: Traded to Buffalo Bills (previous team: Chicago Bears)
The Rams were widely reported to be in the A.J. Brown sweepstakes in March, McVay later admitting that current WR2 Davante Adams, who literally limped down the stretch in 2025 with a bum hamstring, had also been on the trade block. Guess what? Brown is still available. Sure, everyone thinks he's ticketed for New England and a reunion with Mike Vrabel, formerly his head coach in Tennessee. But Snead has another month to figure out a way to get Brown given Philly EVP/GM Howie Roseman canât reasonably move the mercurial wideout before June 1 due to the penal implications his contract would have on the Eaglesâ salary cap otherwise.
And, sure, Brown sulked due to his lack of targets in Philly last season. But just imagine how he might feast on defenders (likely in single coverage) if paired with Stafford, a far more precise and effective passer than Jalen Hurts â not to mention the load heâd reduce on Puka Nacua and, especially, Adams.
And no team loves running multiple tight end sets more than the Rams. A three-wide alignment including Brown is the next-best (better?) thing, the 6-foot-1, 226-pounder who runs like a bull and has finished shy of 1,000 receiving yards just once in seven NFL seasons â and he's never had a QB who remotely approximates Stafford â plenty strong enough to assume some of those blocking duties.
Snead lightly acknowledged the Brown proposition with McAfee.
âThereâs probably different levels on the spectrum of âIs everyone available or not?ââ he said, careful not to say too much about a player under contract with another team â tampering, etc. etc.
But, câmon, Les. Stay in character. Sure, maybe you have to restructure a deal here or there to squeeze Brown under the Rams' cap. But after largely neglecting the offense during free agency and the draft, let's give it that added jolt that might be too much for the Seahawks to handle next time. And, simultaneously, you mollify Stafford and also a fan base largely disaffected by the Simpson choice in the process â to whatever degree that may or might not be necessary.
As good as the 2025 Rams were, if the sequelâs just a touch better in 2026, bleeping those picks and keeping your leading man happy are cost overruns no one will care about.
All NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY's 4th and Monday newsletter.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rams can squash Matthew Stafford-Ty Simpson drama with this one move