Los Angeles Rams
The Los Angeles Rams are a professional football team that competes in the NFL within the NFC West. The team started as the Cleveland Rams in Cleveland, Ohio, where they won their first NFL Championship in 1945, but moved to Los Angeles the following year.
After nearly 50 years in Southern California, the Rams relocated to St. Louis, Missouri, where they won Super Bowl 34. This victory marked their third championship overall but their first Super Bowl win.
To the disappointment of St. Louis residents, the Rams moved back to LA before the 2016 season. They won a second Super Bowl following the 2021 NFL season. The Rams are the only NFL franchise to win championships representing three cities.
Several of the NFL’s most notable legends, including Kurt Warner, Aaron Donald, Eric Dickerson, Deacon Jones, and Marshall Faulk played for the Rams.
- Established: 1936
- Super Bowl championships: two (1999, 2021)
- Additional achievements: five Super Bowl appearances and 15 division championships
- Arena: SoFi Stadium (Inglewood, California)
- Colors: Royal blue and gold
Visit the Los Angeles Rams’ team page.
Read the latest articles about the Los Angeles Rams:
Is Jalen Ramsey still good? That’s the question Dolphins fans are asking after the Jalen Ramsey trade with the Rams.
The Rams reportedly want a Matthew Stafford trade, but the $57 million in guarantees left on the Matthew Stafford contract make that near-impossible.
The Rams may be trying to make a Jalen Ramsey trade this offseason, but what teams can take on the Jalen Ramsey contract?
If Kurt Warner wants to forget about one NFL season, it might be the 2002 campaign.
Find everything you could possibly need to know about Hall of Fame quarterback Kurt Warner.
Kurt Warner, not too far removed from the peak of his powers, only played two games in 2003.
Kurt Warner’s NFL career got off to an inauspicious start in 1998.
Going from unprotected in an expansion draft to winning NFL MVP and Super Bowl MVP in a calendar year simply shouldn’t have been possible. But it was for Kurt Warner.
Kurt Warner’s MVP follow-up wasn’t always smooth. He put up record-setting numbers early before bad luck set in.
Apparently, one MVP wasn’t enough for Kurt Warner during his Hall of Fame career.