
Sean McVay stepped to the podium minutes after calling Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson to tell him the Rams were taking him 13th overall. Confetti energy should have been radiating off the man. Instead, the coach who won Super Bowl LVI, the guy ESPN once described as “a walking espresso shot in terms of energy,” looked flat. Subdued. Almost frustrated. Reporters in the room noticed immediately. Something felt wrong about a head coach announcing his own first-round quarterback like he’d lost a bet. The performance had already started working.
This pick didn’t start on draft night. It started months earlier, during Rose Bowl week in late December 2025, when Rams general manager Les Snead sat down with Simpson’s family. Snead told them directly that he viewed Simpson as a first-round talent. Nothing binding on paper. But the conviction was absolute. At the time, Miami had offered Simpson $6.5 million in NIL money to transfer and keep playing college football. Tennessee and Ole Miss dangled packages in the $4–5 million range. Simpson walked away from all of it on a GM’s word.
On draft night, Simpson told reporters he’d only met with some scouts in Alabama. “That was really it,” he said. Casual. Unremarkable. Exactly what he’d been told to say. Most fans figured the Rams grabbed Simpson on instinct, a reach pick from a team that already had a reigning MVP in Matthew Stafford. The draft looked chaotic, impulsive, maybe even desperate. That was the whole point. Every team watching believed the Rams were winging it, which meant nobody traded up to block them.
Three days later, Simpson admitted everything. “I had some secret meetings with coach McVay, and I was trying to be on script and do what everybody told me and not to tell anybody.” Hours and hours of sessions. McVay had made Simpson the first quarterback he studied on tape after the Super Bowl. He’d vetted the fit personally. Sources confirmed McVay was “absolutely” on board with the pick. His frustration at the podium? Multiple team sources told ESPN they believe McVay felt the need to downplay the pick to accentuate his confidence in Stafford. Months of planning. One fake frown. Every rival fooled.
McVay’s reputation is the weapon that made secrecy essential. He’s one of the NFL’s great offensive minds. If word leaked that McVay had personally stamped Simpson, rival GMs would have recognized the signal instantly. As sources told ESPN, “If it got out that McVay stamped this guy, that could have created more interest ahead of them.” Teams would have called to trade up. The Rams received trade calls on the 13th pick but stood firm. Nobody offered enough because nobody understood what the Rams actually had.
Simpson led Alabama to an 11-4 record with 3,567 passing yards and 28 touchdowns. His clean-pocket PFF grade of 91.3 ranked seventh in the entire class. But his PFF accuracy percentage sat at 58.7%, ranking 24th of 57 draft-eligible quarterbacks. Under pressure, his PFF grade cratered to 47.6, 29th in the class. The Rams drafted a quarterback who looks elite in structure and collapses under heat. That gap between his best and worst is either a development opportunity or a ticking clock behind a 38-year-old MVP.
Jimmy Garoppolo was already contemplating retirement. Simpson’s arrival likely accelerates that exit and the dead cap that comes with it. Stetson Bennett, once positioned as the backup with upside, dropped to third string overnight. His contract expires after the 2026 season, and his market value just took a hit that no training camp performance can fully repair. The Rams now carry three quarterbacks on the roster behind a reigning MVP. That’s a championship-window team spending premium draft capital on a player who may not see meaningful snaps for years.
Snead used the Rams’ College Advisory Committee role to meet Simpson’s family. That system exists to help college players evaluate their draft stock. Snead turned it into a recruitment pipeline. He told Simpson’s family Simpson was a first-round talent, a level of conviction so convincing that a 23-year-old turned down $6.5 million in guaranteed NIL money. This is the first quarterback the Rams drafted higher than 128th overall in nine years. Once you see the pattern, every “surprise” draft pick in the NFL starts looking like a months-old handshake nobody was supposed to witness.
McVay stood at that podium and said, “This is Matthew’s team.” He said it while introducing the man drafted to eventually replace Matthew. Stafford won the MVP in 2025. He’s still elite. And his organization just told the entire league it’s already planning for what comes after him. A personnel source said Simpson compared favorably to No. 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza in parts of the Rams’ building. That’s not backup talk. That’s succession language dressed in press-conference diplomacy, and every team in the NFC heard it.
Other GMs will copy this. Visit families through advisory channels. Make conviction statements that feel binding without putting anything on paper. Coach your prospect to deny meetings on camera. Perform disappointment at the podium so convincingly that analysts spend 48 hours debating whether you even wanted your own pick. Les Snead told Simpson’s family the truth in December and lied to the rest of the league until April. The next time a coach looks unhappy announcing a first-round pick, the smart money says he’s been planning it since Christmas. Was McVay’s grumpy podium routine genius misdirection or insulting to Stafford on his way out the door? Drop your verdict below — and tell us which NFC team gets duped next.
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