The Rams were the only team in the NFL to average 30 points per game in 2025 and then scored over 30 points in two of their three playoff games. They return all of their key offensive players and are set to run it back with no meaningful reason that they should be unable to. Stafford playing at an MVP level with an elite running game, dynamic receiving options, and one of the best schemes in the league is repeatable and everything else flows from there.
I can actually envision a scenario where this Rams offense becomes even more potent and fantasy friendly in 2026, as crazy as that may sound. Puka is Puka and Davante is much cheaper to acquire this year. The backfield production in McVay’s offense when it is humming is off the charts, which means either Kyren or Corum could be an elite option at the position if the other ever misses time. Also, the way this team is building around and using the tight end position seems to be ahead of the curve as the rest of the NFL scrambles to catch up to the recent trend. This game of cat and mouse works with defenses as well, and the stress it will likely cause and adjustments teams will be forced to make will open them up to other things that the Rams can exploit. I think Parkinson and Ferguson are extremely talented chess pieces that are poised to take their games to another level in 2026 and when you fully add that dynamic to the talent, IQ, and scheme that made this offense so good in 2025 – a repeat of being the top offense in the league wouldn’t be shocking in the least.
The bear case, the key risk factors, and detailed position-by-position takeaways for every fantasy-relevant player on this roster are all waiting behind a free account. From quarterback fragility to backfield splits to late-round tight end sleepers, this analysis covers the draft strategy angles you need heading into 2026.