Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

GM Les Snead: Rams must 'delegate' to make life easier for Sean McVay

Los Angeles Rams general manager Les Snead sounds like somebody who understands head coach Sean McVay could burn out at any time. 

"I've often said to Sean, when he got the job at age 30, the guy's been basically running an 800-meter sprint every week since he got our job, adding the head coaching title, and probably had been running an 800-meter sprint as an offensive coordinator for the two previous seasons in Washington," Snead explained during Thursday's end-of-season news conference, per Stu Jackson of the Rams' website. "At some point, a hamstring's gonna get tight, a hamstring's going to get pulled, and you're not going to be able to do it, and (there's) just ways to probably delegate more, but somehow take his weekly rhythm and make it more sustainable."

As noted by Kevin Patra of the NFL's website, the Rams signed both Snead and McVay to extensions that are set to run through the 2026 season coming off the club's Super Bowl LVI win over the Cincinnati Bengals last February. However, Los Angeles endured numerous injury woes throughout the 2022 campaign en route to finishing the season with a 5-12 record. McVay then raised eyebrows after Week 18 when he initially didn't commit to remaining with the organization, but he's since made it known he's running it back with the Rams for at least one more year. 

Interestingly, Snead offered his comments one day after NFL insider Jason La Canfora of the Washington Post reported that the Rams could contact former Indianapolis Colts head coach Frank Reich about replacing offensive coordinator Liam Coen after Coen returned to the University of Kentucky. La Canfora mentioned the Rams want Reich or presumably a different individual with head-coaching experience to serve "as associate head coach/offense — or whatever job title is necessary" because it's thought "McVay is year-to-year as head coach." Thus, the club wants a potential successor on the coaching staff sooner rather than later. 

Snead's remarks coupled with La Canfora's story suggest those associated with the Rams understand McVay is unofficially on a one-year contract that includes a personal option for the following season, an option that allows him to explore available broadcasting opportunities as soon as next January. The 36-year-old admitted before Week 18 that he has "been interested in" making an eventual jump from the sidelines to the booth. 

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Pirates place left-hander, catcher on injured list
Mavs get good news on Maxi Kleber ahead of Game 4
Patriots exec discusses team's approach to QB competition
Braves to promote No. 3 prospect for MLB debut Wednesday
Diamondbacks release veteran infielder
Packers' former first-round pick planning to make 'monster leap'
NFLPA finalizing proposal for major change to offseason schedule
LeBron James shouts out Jaylen Brown after Celtics advance to NBA Finals
Pacers collapse down the stretch as Celtics sweep ECF
Hall of Famer, beloved broadcaster Bill Walton dead at 71
Jason Robertson leads Stars to comeback win over Oilers in Game 3
Despite recent form, Rafael Nadal's legacy is still gold standard for tennis
Bengals coach offers significant injury update on QB Joe Burrow
MLB officials expect automated ball-strike system to be implemented in 2026
Vikings reportedly considered Justin Jefferson trade during NFL Draft
A matured Kyrie Irving is finally proving to be the star we all knew he could be
Insider: Sixers 'a threat' to sign LeBron James in free agency
Week 14 NASCAR rankings: Larson's no-show shakes up the running order
Three hitters Braves should target after losing Ronald Acuna Jr.
Shohei Ohtani shares major update on his pitching rehab

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.