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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Cameron DaSilva

Grading the Jalen Ramsey trade for the Rams: LA loses this deal

When rumors surfaced of the Los Angeles Rams potentially trading Jalen Ramsey, speculation was running rampant about what they might be able to get in return for the star cornerback. Some thought he’d be worth at least a first-round pick, while others believed it’d only be a few mid-rounders.

Few people thought the Rams would get as little as they did. Los Angeles has agreed to trade him to the Dolphins for a third-round pick this year and tight end Hunter Long, coming nowhere close to landing a first-rounder.

It’s obvious what this trade was about, and it wasn’t for the draft capital. It was all about the Rams trying to clear cap space not only for this year, but next year especially. Now with Ramsey off the books, the Rams have $50 million in cap space in 2024, which will help them retool their roster next offseason.

Regardless of the money the Rams are saving, this is a bad trade by them. They’re giving up one of the best cornerbacks in the NFL and only getting back a reserve tight end and a Day 2 pick. There will be quality prospects available at No. 77 overall, but not a single one will have the same impact in 2023 that Ramsey has had.

Long probably won’t be a player who contributes a ton on offense, even with Tyler Higbee possibly being a cap casualty this offseason. It’s not as if they added a dynamic pass-catching tight end like Mike Gesicki, either. Long is a 2021 third-round pick with very little experience, so he’s not a proven player yet.

What makes this trade particularly bad for the Rams is the comparable deals made for cornerbacks in years past. The Lions got a third- and fifth-round pick for Darius Slay when he was seeking a new contract. The Jaguars even got a fourth-rounder for A.J. Bouye in 2020.

In 2013, the Jets got a first- and fourth-rounder for Darrelle Revis when he was 28 and coming off a torn ACL.

Compared to other trades for cornerbacks, the Rams’ return for Ramsey looks terrible. Though he was also seeking a new contract, his current deal was very tradable and favorable for whichever team acquired him; he had just $5 million guaranteed left.

One thing to consider in all of this is the Rams doing right by Ramsey. It was reported Sunday that there was a lot of interest in him, but Ramsey clearly wanted to go to the Dolphins, so that’s where they sent him. It’s possible they could’ve gotten more from someone else, but they wanted to send Ramsey to the right spot.

Regardless, the Rams absolutely come out looking like the losers of this deal with Miami.

Grade: D-

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