"I felt like I generally put forth myself with significant standards and guidelines yet I outperformed anything I at any point thought I needed to do," Donald said later, seeming like he without a doubt was considering resigning, his objectives met. "I thought coming in, I needed to be All-Pro and a Pro Bowler yet to stay here and say that I had a ton of individual achievement man, I would've never thought in 1,000,000 years that I'll stay here right now with the achievement I had in the short measure of time in this association, and to be a title holder in my eighth year." 사설토토
Anything that the future holds, the Rams weren't highly centered around it Sunday night. In the clamor of the Rams' party, McVay spied me and gave me a bearhug.
"You picked us! The previous summer, you picked us! You knew!" he said.
All things considered, I picked a Rams-Bills Super Bowl, and I was bullish on the Rams. Be that as it may, in this absurdly even season, the misery of rout was significantly increased, similar to the delight of winning.
I believe it's essential to examine McVay here. It isn't simply the two Super Bowl appearances in five years that make McVay a fundamental figure in the Rams' modify. It's the intensity of the association in picking him. It's an establishment that said, The standard has not worked for us. Rich Brooks, Jeff Fisher … We must accomplish something else. What the group confronted entering the 2017 mentor recruiting season was the possibility of breaking the norm. "We completely inspected everything," Demoff said a week ago. "Two things were vital to us-we were rearward in the NFL in offense, and we didn't have the sort of energy, excitement we thought we really wanted."
The Rams talked with 10 mentors in January 2017. They continued to return to the 30-year-old Washington hostile organizer, Sean McVay. Demoff, Pastoors and GM Les Snead all adored McVay, however they were stressed that Kroenke, frantic for a drawn out fix in Los Angeles, would be more disposed to need a veteran mentor. "I wasn't excessively reluctant," Kroenke said Sunday night. The option was an exchange for Saint mentor Sean Payton, who the Rams had heard may be accessible for critical draft-decision pay. Kroenke confided in his staff. Go with the child, he told them.
"The NFL endowed Stan with L.A., and depended our establishment with the most obvious opportunity in L.A. In years," Demoff said. "We simply didn't have any desire to let them down. So Stan moved the dice on a 30-year-old child mentor. We as a whole understood assuming we were off-base with regards to Sean, it could cost us our professions. However, it was an opportunity we were ready to take."
The McVay recruit was welcomed, all things considered, similar to a fart in chapel. Mike Lombardi, writing in The Ringer, had this take of the Rams' recruit: "They're neglectful of their losing society, thusly they never view their concerns from a worldwide perspective, rather thinking straightly. They lessen this amazing measure of losing to a straightforward arrangement - simply get a decent quarterback mentor, and we'll be fine."
That is the thing about difficult choices. For 10 straight years the Rams had been under .500, first in St. Louis and afterward in Los Angeles. Why bother proceeding with what hasn't worked? So the Rams picked McVay, the fiery one, and he hasn't disheartened. Three NFC West titles, two NFC title crowns, one Super Bowl ring. It's been a decent five years for the Rams.