Rams Sign Jaylen Watson to Three-Year Deal as Secondary Prepares
The Los Angeles Rams have agreed to a three-year contract with Super Bowl-winning cornerback Jaylen Watson following his departure from the Kansas City Chiefs. This move completes GM Les Snead's strategy of doubling down on defensive needs by pairing him alongside Trent McDuffie, who was recently acquired in trade action during free agency tampering. The veteran playmaker joins an offense that ranked first nationally for points scored and nearly advanced to a championship game last season before falling short against Seattle.
Key Points
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1The Los Angeles Rams have agreed to a three-year contract with cornerback Jaylen Watson.
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2Watson is joining the team as part of an effort led by GM Les Snead and his focus on defensive needs, specifically pairing him up Trent McDuffie in secondary play. Both players are former Kansas City Chiefs teammates who won Super Bowls together.
Developments
The Los Angeles Rams addressed their league-leading cornerback issues by trading picks to acquire Trent McDuffie from Kansas City and signing Jaylen Watson. These moves added two high-priced defensive backs with strong track records of limiting opponent scoring after the catch following a season where they allowed over 2,000 yards on targets for multiple touchdowns each year respectively
On December 7, the Los Angeles Rams agreed terms with former Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Jaylen Watson. His contract includes only $1 million in guaranteed money but carries significant cap hits of $34M and $58M for his two years as a player on their roster (2026-2029).
The Los Angeles Rams agreed to terms with former Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Jaylen Watson for three years including $34 million in guarantees, reuniting him and teammate Trent McDuffie as the team reshapes its secondary. This move follows recent extensions of safety Quentin Lake ($25M) Kam Curl (~$24M), while other cornerbacks like Cobie Durant remain pending free agents with a fifth-year option expiring this May for Watson's potential extension consideration by then