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Deadspin | USC’s outburst sets Galen Center points record in Manhattan romp

Deadspin | USC’s outburst sets Galen Center points record in Manhattan romp

Mar 12, 2025; Indianapolis, IN, USA; USC Trojans head coach Eric Musselman in the second half against the Rutgers Scarlet Knights at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Chad Baker-Mazara scored 20 of his 26 points in the first half, and Southern California put up its second and third halves of 55-plus points this season on the way to a 114-83 rout of visiting Manhattan on Sunday in Los Angeles.

Coming off of a 57-point half to close last Monday’s season-opening rout of Cal Poly, USC (2-0) continued to click offensively en route to the program’s highest-scoring outing in almost 28 years and the most in the history of Galen Center.

For USC, six other scorers joined Baker-Mazara in double-figures. Ezra Ausar finished with 17 points, Rodney Rice shook off a sluggish shooting start to score 14 points, Terrance Williams scored 10 points and Jacob Cofie recorded a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds.

Jordan Marsh knocked down 3-of-5 from long range en route to 11 points and Jaden Brownell added 13 points off the bench.

The Trojans shot 6-of-11 from 3-point distance before intermission.

The Trojans cooled from deep in the second half, going just 2-of-10, but still finished shooting better than 50% from the floor overall for the game at 41-of-81.

Baker-Mazara, a transfer from 2025 Final Four participant Auburn, helped key the Trojans at both the 3-point and free-throw lines. He shot 3-of-4 from beyond the arc and a perfect 9-of-9 on foul shots, despite dealing with foul trouble in his own right.

Baker-Mazara was on the sidelines with foul trouble for most of a 20-4 run that he began his made jumper at the 13:18 mark and extended until Quron Elliott’s 3-pointer with 8:23 remaining.

That stretch snuffed out any hope of a rally for Manhattan (1-1), which had been hovering around an 18-point margin after USC first extended the lead to double-digits with a 25-11 push to close the first half.

Jaden Winston led all scorers with 29 points. He shot 9-of-14 from the floor, and went 3-of-5 from 3-point distance. The rest of the Jaspers went just 3-of-17 on 3-point attempts.

Anthony Isaac scored 16 points and Terrance Jones added 18 points for the Jaspers.

The Trojans balanced distribution fueled USC’s first 100-plus-point game since a 106-78 rout of Eastern Washington on Nov. 29, 2023 and a program single-game high since a 117-71 blowout of Arizona State in March 1998.

–Field Level Media

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Deadspin | Twins starter Taj Bradley gears up to face former Rays teammates     Apr 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Taj Bradley (26) pitches to the Toronto Blue Jaysduring the first inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images   Minnesota right-hander Taj Bradley, once regarded as the Tampa Bay Rays’ No. 1 prospect, will face his old team for the first time since getting sent to the Twins at last year’s trade deadline when the two teams open a three-game series on Friday night in St. Petersburg, Fla.  Bradley (3-0, 1.63 ERA), who went 19-25 with a 4.70 ERA over 69 games (67 starts) with the Rays, was shipped to the Twins last July 31 for reliever Griffin Jax.  “It will be weird being on the field in a different dugout,” Bradley told mlbbro.com. “I’m excited to be pitching in Tropicana Field for the first time in a year. I get to face teammates of mine and friends. I’ll just have fun with it.”  Bradley, a fifth-round pick of Tampa Bay in the 2018 MLB Draft, had an up-and-down three seasons with the Rays. He was the American League Pitcher of the Month in July of 2024 after going 3-1 with a 1.45 ERA in five starts, but from July 31 through Sept. 10, he went 0-6 with an 8.27 ERA.  He was 6-6 with a 4.61 ERA in 21 starts for the Rays in 2025 before the trade to Minnesota, where he went 0-2 in six starts, with a 6.61 ERA.  Bradley, 25, has bounced back to be one of baseball’s best starters in 2026, ranking third in the American League in ERA (1.63) and striking out 34 batters in 27 2/3 innings. He outdueled two-time American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal of Detroit in a 4-2 victory on April 7 at Target Field, allowing one run on six hits over 6 1/3 innings while striking out 10.  “Taj is a really talented pitcher,” Rays manager Kevin Cash told the Tampa Bay Times. “Happy for the success, want to see him perform well, want to see him have a great career.  “Hopefully, we don’t get the best version of Taj, because we’ve seen it when he’s been in our dugout, that when he’s on he is very tough and very talented, can create a lot of strikeouts.”   Bradley has never faced the Rays, and Minnesota stumbles into the series having lost six of its last seven games, including a 10-8 defeat on Thursday night to the Mets in New York.  Ryan Jeffers hit a grand slam in the top of the eighth to tie it at 7-7, but Bo Bichette answered with a three-run double in the bottom half to win it for the Mets.  Veteran right-hander Drew Rasmussen (1-0, 2.75 ERA) will start the series opener for Tampa Bay, which had a day off Tafter snapping a three-game losing streak with a 6-1 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday. Rasmussen is 1-1 with a 4.15 ERA in six appearances (three starts) against the Twins.   Nick Martinez, who had pitched for the Reds the previous two seasons, picked up his first win with the Rays, allowing one run on five hits over eight innings while striking out six. Junior Caminero hit his sixth homer and Yandy Diaz raised his average to .340, which ranks second in the majors, by going 3-for-4 with an RBI and a run.  “I love it, man. It’s a lot of fun,” Martinez said. “Obviously, they know what I do well, and they know that I love to compete. … It’s always fun competing against your buddies.”  The Rays have dropped three of their last four games.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Twins #starter #Taj #Bradley #gears #face #Rays #teammatesApr 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Taj Bradley (26) pitches to the Toronto Blue Jaysduring the first inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Minnesota right-hander Taj Bradley, once regarded as the Tampa Bay Rays’ No. 1 prospect, will face his old team for the first time since getting sent to the Twins at last year’s trade deadline when the two teams open a three-game series on Friday night in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Bradley (3-0, 1.63 ERA), who went 19-25 with a 4.70 ERA over 69 games (67 starts) with the Rays, was shipped to the Twins last July 31 for reliever Griffin Jax.

“It will be weird being on the field in a different dugout,” Bradley told mlbbro.com. “I’m excited to be pitching in Tropicana Field for the first time in a year. I get to face teammates of mine and friends. I’ll just have fun with it.”

Bradley, a fifth-round pick of Tampa Bay in the 2018 MLB Draft, had an up-and-down three seasons with the Rays. He was the American League Pitcher of the Month in July of 2024 after going 3-1 with a 1.45 ERA in five starts, but from July 31 through Sept. 10, he went 0-6 with an 8.27 ERA.

He was 6-6 with a 4.61 ERA in 21 starts for the Rays in 2025 before the trade to Minnesota, where he went 0-2 in six starts, with a 6.61 ERA.

Bradley, 25, has bounced back to be one of baseball’s best starters in 2026, ranking third in the American League in ERA (1.63) and striking out 34 batters in 27 2/3 innings. He outdueled two-time American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal of Detroit in a 4-2 victory on April 7 at Target Field, allowing one run on six hits over 6 1/3 innings while striking out 10.

“Taj is a really talented pitcher,” Rays manager Kevin Cash told the Tampa Bay Times. “Happy for the success, want to see him perform well, want to see him have a great career.


“Hopefully, we don’t get the best version of Taj, because we’ve seen it when he’s been in our dugout, that when he’s on he is very tough and very talented, can create a lot of strikeouts.”

Bradley has never faced the Rays, and Minnesota stumbles into the series having lost six of its last seven games, including a 10-8 defeat on Thursday night to the Mets in New York.

Ryan Jeffers hit a grand slam in the top of the eighth to tie it at 7-7, but Bo Bichette answered with a three-run double in the bottom half to win it for the Mets.

Veteran right-hander Drew Rasmussen (1-0, 2.75 ERA) will start the series opener for Tampa Bay, which had a day off Tafter snapping a three-game losing streak with a 6-1 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday. Rasmussen is 1-1 with a 4.15 ERA in six appearances (three starts) against the Twins.

Nick Martinez, who had pitched for the Reds the previous two seasons, picked up his first win with the Rays, allowing one run on five hits over eight innings while striking out six. Junior Caminero hit his sixth homer and Yandy Diaz raised his average to .340, which ranks second in the majors, by going 3-for-4 with an RBI and a run.

“I love it, man. It’s a lot of fun,” Martinez said. “Obviously, they know what I do well, and they know that I love to compete. … It’s always fun competing against your buddies.”

The Rays have dropped three of their last four games.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Twins #starter #Taj #Bradley #gears #face #Rays #teammates">Deadspin | Twins starter Taj Bradley gears up to face former Rays teammates     Apr 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Taj Bradley (26) pitches to the Toronto Blue Jaysduring the first inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images   Minnesota right-hander Taj Bradley, once regarded as the Tampa Bay Rays’ No. 1 prospect, will face his old team for the first time since getting sent to the Twins at last year’s trade deadline when the two teams open a three-game series on Friday night in St. Petersburg, Fla.  Bradley (3-0, 1.63 ERA), who went 19-25 with a 4.70 ERA over 69 games (67 starts) with the Rays, was shipped to the Twins last July 31 for reliever Griffin Jax.  “It will be weird being on the field in a different dugout,” Bradley told mlbbro.com. “I’m excited to be pitching in Tropicana Field for the first time in a year. I get to face teammates of mine and friends. I’ll just have fun with it.”  Bradley, a fifth-round pick of Tampa Bay in the 2018 MLB Draft, had an up-and-down three seasons with the Rays. He was the American League Pitcher of the Month in July of 2024 after going 3-1 with a 1.45 ERA in five starts, but from July 31 through Sept. 10, he went 0-6 with an 8.27 ERA.  He was 6-6 with a 4.61 ERA in 21 starts for the Rays in 2025 before the trade to Minnesota, where he went 0-2 in six starts, with a 6.61 ERA.  Bradley, 25, has bounced back to be one of baseball’s best starters in 2026, ranking third in the American League in ERA (1.63) and striking out 34 batters in 27 2/3 innings. He outdueled two-time American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal of Detroit in a 4-2 victory on April 7 at Target Field, allowing one run on six hits over 6 1/3 innings while striking out 10.  “Taj is a really talented pitcher,” Rays manager Kevin Cash told the Tampa Bay Times. “Happy for the success, want to see him perform well, want to see him have a great career.  “Hopefully, we don’t get the best version of Taj, because we’ve seen it when he’s been in our dugout, that when he’s on he is very tough and very talented, can create a lot of strikeouts.”   Bradley has never faced the Rays, and Minnesota stumbles into the series having lost six of its last seven games, including a 10-8 defeat on Thursday night to the Mets in New York.  Ryan Jeffers hit a grand slam in the top of the eighth to tie it at 7-7, but Bo Bichette answered with a three-run double in the bottom half to win it for the Mets.  Veteran right-hander Drew Rasmussen (1-0, 2.75 ERA) will start the series opener for Tampa Bay, which had a day off Tafter snapping a three-game losing streak with a 6-1 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday. Rasmussen is 1-1 with a 4.15 ERA in six appearances (three starts) against the Twins.   Nick Martinez, who had pitched for the Reds the previous two seasons, picked up his first win with the Rays, allowing one run on five hits over eight innings while striking out six. Junior Caminero hit his sixth homer and Yandy Diaz raised his average to .340, which ranks second in the majors, by going 3-for-4 with an RBI and a run.  “I love it, man. It’s a lot of fun,” Martinez said. “Obviously, they know what I do well, and they know that I love to compete. … It’s always fun competing against your buddies.”  The Rays have dropped three of their last four games.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Twins #starter #Taj #Bradley #gears #face #Rays #teammates

It’s not that Simpson is bad, or even that the Rams taking him wasn’t on the cards. In fact, for a long time there was speculation the team would take Simpson in the 1st round, just at No. 29, until Los Angeles traded the pick for Trent McDuffie. The confusion around the selection is aimed more at the fact that taking a quarterback to prepare for the eventuality of Matthew Stafford’s retirement was too cute, and too smart for its own good — especially when the Rams are a team built to win right now.

This only got worse following the draft when coach Sean McVay looked flat-out annoyed while hearing GM Les Snead wax poetic about Ty Simpson.

“We’ve talked about the importance of Jimmy [Garoppolo]. To be able to add somebody that you can evaluate a body of work where he was asked to play the position and a lot of things that do translate in terms of concepts, reading with his feet, some of the different things in the drop back in the play-action game and the movement game. There are a lot of things that [Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan] Grubb did that’s very similar to how we operate, so it made it an easier evaluation to be able to say, ‘Alright, what would that look like if he did translate it to our level?’”

Here’s another clip from McVay’s post-draft presser:

The most generous reading of these comments is that McVay is fine with the pick. His verbiage is more akin to how coaches talk about day three picks, not someone you take No. 13 overall. This is especially notable considering the board at the time, which could have landed the Rams someone like Makai Lemon or Kenyon Sadiq, either of whom would have bolstered the Rams passing attack — or even safety Dillon Thieneman, who would have been an upgrade to the secondary.

It’s going to be at least two years before we learn whether or not picking Simpson was a genius move or not, but there are more questions about the pick after people learned that Snead had personal entanglements with the Simpson family.

It’s only natural to question whether or not Snead had tunnel vision for Simpson throughout this process. One would think that a general manager and head coach’s vision naturally aligns, but this is a case where it might not. Snead’s job is to be more forward-looking at the overall health of the franchise, while McVay’s is to get the most out of the guys he has in front of him. There very well could have been friction about seeing the Falcons’ pick (which they obtained in 2025) as a means to land a quarterback, with the expectation that they’ll otherwise be picking in the back-end of the 20s, or hopefully 32 — while McVay didn’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, and instead get someone that would help prevent the Rams from flaming out in the playoffs.

What makes this all so interesting is that the Rams are typically an organization held up as a paragon of vision and smart decision-making. Selecting Simpson could end up being genius, or a bizarrely desperate move to get a second-round QB talent too early in the draft, just to correct a problem that doesn’t exist yet.

When Simpson does eventually take over for the Rams at QB, he’ll have barely played football at all since leaving high school:

One thing is certain: If the Rams fail to make it to the Super Bowl this season, then everyone will be looking at who could have helped the team with this No. 13 pick — and it won’t be Ty Simpson.

#Rams #shocking #Simpson #pick #pissed #Sean #McVay #heres">The Rams’ shocking Ty Simpson pick might have pissed off Sean McVay, and here’s why  There were a lot of surprises in the first round of the NFL Draft on Thursday night. The Titans taking Carnell Tate at No. 4? Unexpected. Caleb Downs, Rueben Bain, and Makai Lemon all sliding? Shocking — but it was what the Los Angeles Rams did with the No. 13 overall pick that was truly jaw-dropping, selecting Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson to be their signal caller of the future. We gave the pick a C+ grade.It’s not that Simpson is bad, or even that the Rams taking him wasn’t on the cards. In fact, for a long time there was speculation the team would take Simpson in the 1st round, just at No. 29, until Los Angeles traded the pick for Trent McDuffie. The confusion around the selection is aimed more at the fact that taking a quarterback to prepare for the eventuality of Matthew Stafford’s retirement was too cute, and too smart for its own good — especially when the Rams are a team built to win right now.This only got worse following the draft when coach Sean McVay looked flat-out annoyed while hearing GM Les Snead wax poetic about Ty Simpson.“We’ve talked about the importance of Jimmy [Garoppolo]. To be able to add somebody that you can evaluate a body of work where he was asked to play the position and a lot of things that do translate in terms of concepts, reading with his feet, some of the different things in the drop back in the play-action game and the movement game. There are a lot of things that [Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan] Grubb did that’s very similar to how we operate, so it made it an easier evaluation to be able to say, ‘Alright, what would that look like if he did translate it to our level?’”Here’s another clip from McVay’s post-draft presser:The most generous reading of these comments is that McVay is fine with the pick. His verbiage is more akin to how coaches talk about day three picks, not someone you take No. 13 overall. This is especially notable considering the board at the time, which could have landed the Rams someone like Makai Lemon or Kenyon Sadiq, either of whom would have bolstered the Rams passing attack — or even safety Dillon Thieneman, who would have been an upgrade to the secondary.It’s going to be at least two years before we learn whether or not picking Simpson was a genius move or not, but there are more questions about the pick after people learned that Snead had personal entanglements with the Simpson family.It’s only natural to question whether or not Snead had tunnel vision for Simpson throughout this process. One would think that a general manager and head coach’s vision naturally aligns, but this is a case where it might not. Snead’s job is to be more forward-looking at the overall health of the franchise, while McVay’s is to get the most out of the guys he has in front of him. There very well could have been friction about seeing the Falcons’ pick (which they obtained in 2025) as a means to land a quarterback, with the expectation that they’ll otherwise be picking in the back-end of the 20s, or hopefully 32 — while McVay didn’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, and instead get someone that would help prevent the Rams from flaming out in the playoffs.What makes this all so interesting is that the Rams are typically an organization held up as a paragon of vision and smart decision-making. Selecting Simpson could end up being genius, or a bizarrely desperate move to get a second-round QB talent too early in the draft, just to correct a problem that doesn’t exist yet.When Simpson does eventually take over for the Rams at QB, he’ll have barely played football at all since leaving high school:One thing is certain: If the Rams fail to make it to the Super Bowl this season, then everyone will be looking at who could have helped the team with this No. 13 pick — and it won’t be Ty Simpson.  #Rams #shocking #Simpson #pick #pissed #Sean #McVay #heres

a lot of surprises in the first round of the NFL Draft on Thursday night. The Titans taking Carnell Tate at No. 4? Unexpected. Caleb Downs, Rueben Bain, and Makai Lemon all sliding? Shocking — but it was what the Los Angeles Rams did with the No. 13 overall pick that was truly jaw-dropping, selecting Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson to be their signal caller of the future. We gave the pick a C+ grade.

It’s not that Simpson is bad, or even that the Rams taking him wasn’t on the cards. In fact, for a long time there was speculation the team would take Simpson in the 1st round, just at No. 29, until Los Angeles traded the pick for Trent McDuffie. The confusion around the selection is aimed more at the fact that taking a quarterback to prepare for the eventuality of Matthew Stafford’s retirement was too cute, and too smart for its own good — especially when the Rams are a team built to win right now.

This only got worse following the draft when coach Sean McVay looked flat-out annoyed while hearing GM Les Snead wax poetic about Ty Simpson.

“We’ve talked about the importance of Jimmy [Garoppolo]. To be able to add somebody that you can evaluate a body of work where he was asked to play the position and a lot of things that do translate in terms of concepts, reading with his feet, some of the different things in the drop back in the play-action game and the movement game. There are a lot of things that [Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan] Grubb did that’s very similar to how we operate, so it made it an easier evaluation to be able to say, ‘Alright, what would that look like if he did translate it to our level?’”

Here’s another clip from McVay’s post-draft presser:

The most generous reading of these comments is that McVay is fine with the pick. His verbiage is more akin to how coaches talk about day three picks, not someone you take No. 13 overall. This is especially notable considering the board at the time, which could have landed the Rams someone like Makai Lemon or Kenyon Sadiq, either of whom would have bolstered the Rams passing attack — or even safety Dillon Thieneman, who would have been an upgrade to the secondary.

It’s going to be at least two years before we learn whether or not picking Simpson was a genius move or not, but there are more questions about the pick after people learned that Snead had personal entanglements with the Simpson family.

It’s only natural to question whether or not Snead had tunnel vision for Simpson throughout this process. One would think that a general manager and head coach’s vision naturally aligns, but this is a case where it might not. Snead’s job is to be more forward-looking at the overall health of the franchise, while McVay’s is to get the most out of the guys he has in front of him. There very well could have been friction about seeing the Falcons’ pick (which they obtained in 2025) as a means to land a quarterback, with the expectation that they’ll otherwise be picking in the back-end of the 20s, or hopefully 32 — while McVay didn’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, and instead get someone that would help prevent the Rams from flaming out in the playoffs.

What makes this all so interesting is that the Rams are typically an organization held up as a paragon of vision and smart decision-making. Selecting Simpson could end up being genius, or a bizarrely desperate move to get a second-round QB talent too early in the draft, just to correct a problem that doesn’t exist yet.

When Simpson does eventually take over for the Rams at QB, he’ll have barely played football at all since leaving high school:

One thing is certain: If the Rams fail to make it to the Super Bowl this season, then everyone will be looking at who could have helped the team with this No. 13 pick — and it won’t be Ty Simpson.

#Rams #shocking #Simpson #pick #pissed #Sean #McVay #heres">The Rams’ shocking Ty Simpson pick might have pissed off Sean McVay, and here’s why

There were a lot of surprises in the first round of the NFL Draft on Thursday night. The Titans taking Carnell Tate at No. 4? Unexpected. Caleb Downs, Rueben Bain, and Makai Lemon all sliding? Shocking — but it was what the Los Angeles Rams did with the No. 13 overall pick that was truly jaw-dropping, selecting Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson to be their signal caller of the future. We gave the pick a C+ grade.

It’s not that Simpson is bad, or even that the Rams taking him wasn’t on the cards. In fact, for a long time there was speculation the team would take Simpson in the 1st round, just at No. 29, until Los Angeles traded the pick for Trent McDuffie. The confusion around the selection is aimed more at the fact that taking a quarterback to prepare for the eventuality of Matthew Stafford’s retirement was too cute, and too smart for its own good — especially when the Rams are a team built to win right now.

This only got worse following the draft when coach Sean McVay looked flat-out annoyed while hearing GM Les Snead wax poetic about Ty Simpson.

“We’ve talked about the importance of Jimmy [Garoppolo]. To be able to add somebody that you can evaluate a body of work where he was asked to play the position and a lot of things that do translate in terms of concepts, reading with his feet, some of the different things in the drop back in the play-action game and the movement game. There are a lot of things that [Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan] Grubb did that’s very similar to how we operate, so it made it an easier evaluation to be able to say, ‘Alright, what would that look like if he did translate it to our level?’”

Here’s another clip from McVay’s post-draft presser:

The most generous reading of these comments is that McVay is fine with the pick. His verbiage is more akin to how coaches talk about day three picks, not someone you take No. 13 overall. This is especially notable considering the board at the time, which could have landed the Rams someone like Makai Lemon or Kenyon Sadiq, either of whom would have bolstered the Rams passing attack — or even safety Dillon Thieneman, who would have been an upgrade to the secondary.

It’s going to be at least two years before we learn whether or not picking Simpson was a genius move or not, but there are more questions about the pick after people learned that Snead had personal entanglements with the Simpson family.

It’s only natural to question whether or not Snead had tunnel vision for Simpson throughout this process. One would think that a general manager and head coach’s vision naturally aligns, but this is a case where it might not. Snead’s job is to be more forward-looking at the overall health of the franchise, while McVay’s is to get the most out of the guys he has in front of him. There very well could have been friction about seeing the Falcons’ pick (which they obtained in 2025) as a means to land a quarterback, with the expectation that they’ll otherwise be picking in the back-end of the 20s, or hopefully 32 — while McVay didn’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, and instead get someone that would help prevent the Rams from flaming out in the playoffs.

What makes this all so interesting is that the Rams are typically an organization held up as a paragon of vision and smart decision-making. Selecting Simpson could end up being genius, or a bizarrely desperate move to get a second-round QB talent too early in the draft, just to correct a problem that doesn’t exist yet.

When Simpson does eventually take over for the Rams at QB, he’ll have barely played football at all since leaving high school:

One thing is certain: If the Rams fail to make it to the Super Bowl this season, then everyone will be looking at who could have helped the team with this No. 13 pick — and it won’t be Ty Simpson.

#Rams #shocking #Simpson #pick #pissed #Sean #McVay #heres

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