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Top 50 Los Angeles Rams

It is a long road with many stops before we get to the modern incarnation of the Los Angeles Rams and we have to begin by going to Lake Erie and the North Shore where the organization first took shape in Cleveland.

Formed in 1936, the Cleveland Rams were the fourth attempt to put together a professional football team in the city and the team was mediocre year after year bouncing from one stadium to another.  Due to a shortage of players, the Rams suspended play in the 1943 season and returned the following year.  With rookie Quarterback, Bob Waterfield, the Rams won the NFL Championship in 1945, which would be their last in Cleveland.  Owner, Dan Reeves sought a larger venue, namely Los Angeles, which had the 100,000 seat plus Memorial Coliseum and they would become the first major team to switch coasts. 

Football was a hit in Los Angeles and in the 1950’s they were amongst the best in the National Football League.  With a team of stars like Waterfield, Norm Van Brocklin, Tom Fears and Elroy “Crazy Legs” Hirsch the Rams went to the NFL Championship three times in the decade and would win their second NFL Title in 1951.  The team went into the 60’s still exceeding popular, but now boasted defensive stars, specifically the “Fearsome Foursome”, who were such a draw that the team became the first in the NFL to draw more than a million fans.

The Rams continued to do well in the 1970s and they went to their first Super Bowl for the 1979 season but they would fall to the Pittsburgh Steelers.  The ’80s again saw some success but they would change locations and play their home games in Anaheim and the Oakland Raiders relocated south moving to the Coliseum.  This split the L.A. fanbase and the once popular Rams lost the favor of Southern California.  Citing a need for a new stadium, Rams ownership (Georgia Frontiere) moved the team to St. Louis prior to the 1995 season and it was certainly not without controversy as many of the other NFL owners opposed it initially but it did bring football back to St. Louis who used to have the Arizona Cardinals.

The St. Louis Rams in the late ’90s would become one of the most exciting teams in Pro Football with “The Greatest Show on Turf”, a loaded offensive squad featuring Kurt Warner, Marshall Faulk, Isaac Bruce, Torry Holt and Orlando Pace and they won Super Bowl XXXIV, the first in franchise history.  They went to Super Bowl XXXVI but lost to the New England Patriots.  After that, the Rams regressed and due to a clause in their lease they were able to leave if their facility was not considered top tier.  Negotiations broke down between the Rams and the city of St. Louis and new owner Stan Kroenke moved the team back to Los Angeles where they are again an elite team and appeared (and lost) Super Bowl LIII. 

We are hoping the team stays in L.A. and continues to build on what at times has been a decorated franchise, which they did by winning Super Bowl LVI, on the strength of Cooper Kupp and Aaron Donald.


Note: Football lists are based on an amalgamation of tenure, traditional statistics, advanced statistics, playoff statistics, and post-season accolades.

This list is up to the end of the 2022 Season.

The argument can be made (and we are making it) that the most successful Place Kicker in the history of the Rams is Jeff Wilkins, who was a member of their Super Bowl XXXIV winning team.  He played 11 seasons with the Rams where he is the team’s all-time leader in Points Scored (1,223) and was a Pro Bowl Selection…
Dick Bass played all 11 of his National Football League Games with the Los Angeles Rams where the Fullback would be named to three Pro Bowls (1962, 1963 & 1966).  Bass had a pair of 1,000 Rushing Yard Seasons in the '60s with a total of 5,417 and 34 Touchdowns.  This total also had another 1,841 Receiving Yards and 7…
Jack Pardee was the 14th overall pick in 1957, and the Texas A&M Aggie would be a fixture at Linebacker for the Rams for 13 years.  Pardee played 169 for Los Angeles, starting 150 of them.  In 1963 he would be named a First Team All-Pro as well as being named to the Pro Bowl.  He managed to secure 17…
In retrospect, Jim Everett got a bad rap.  He feuded with Jim Rome (who labeled him "Chris" in reference to his play comparing him to the female player, Chris Evert), the Rams gave up a lot for his rights, and he had an overall losing record.
A Super Bowl Champion with the Green Bay Packers, Adam Timmerman signed with the St. Louis Rams where he helped protect the Offensive Line for the most exciting offenses of the late 1990s.  Timmerman was a Pro Bowl Selection in 2001, and he would start 125 of his 126 games as a St. Louis Ram.

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Marc Bulger had the dubious task of replacing Kurt Warner as the starting Quarterback for the St. Louis Rams, but it took some time for that to happen, which considering how long it took Warner to land the job was appropriate.
From Texas A&M, Dave Elmendorf was drafted in the 3rd Round in 1971 and would spend all nine of his seasons in the National Football League with the Los Angeles Rams.  The Safety may never have been chosen for the Pro Bowl but he would play 130 Games in the NFL, and he started every single one of them.  He…
Andy Robustelli was a late round pick from Arnold (the only player ever drafted from there), and he made the team at Defensive End where he would assist the Los Angeles Rams to win the 1951 Championship.  He would blossom into one of the top Defensive players in football, and he was either a First Team or Second Team All-Pro…
Standing at 6' 7", Lamar Lundy might have been the most imposing figure of the Rams' famed "Fearsome Foursome" and was part of a revolution of sorts that helped to glorify modern defense.  The two-sport athlete (he was also a basketball player) was the first black player to receive an athletic scholarship at the University of Purdue, and he opted…
There are few players who had a better half of their NFL career than Andrew Whitworth. Whitworth began his pro career in 2006 with the Bengals, but his first Pro Bowl did not happen until 2012, when he was already past 30.  After two more Pro Bowl with Cincinnati (2015 & 2016), he signed with the Rams in 2017, adding his…
When discussing the Los Angeles Rams Super Bowl LVI win, the trade that landed them Matthew Stafford is considered the deal that made it work, but the transaction that set it in motion was trading for Cornerback, Jalen Ramsey, during the 2019 Season. Ramsey began his career with Jacksonville as the highest Defensive Back selected (Fifth Overall) in the 2016…
Dan Towler played his entire professional football career with the Los Angeles Rams where after being a very late round pick (25th Round) and not expected to do much as a professional football player he did precisely that.  In 1951 to 1954 he finished in the top four in Rushing Yards including leading the NFL in that statistic in 1952…