LOS ANGELES — Aaron Rodgers might not pack his bags for a Pittsburgh reunion after all. The Los Angeles Rams are quietly positioning themselves to snatch the 42-year-old gunslinger right out from under the Steelers. While the sports world waits for Rodgers to announce his 2026 intentions, Sean McVay and the LA front office are weighing a massive audible.
The Aaron Rodgers Rams rumors inject pure chaos into an already wild pre-draft month. Los Angeles currently holds the No. 13 overall pick, and league insiders heavily link them to Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson. But rolling the dice on a rookie is a massive gamble for a roster built to win right now.
The Draft Day Dilemma: Simpson vs. The Veteran
Drafting a quarterback in the first round carries no guarantees. Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza is an overwhelming lock to go first overall to the Las Vegas Raiders. That leaves the Rams staring at a tiered drop-off. Ty Simpson brings raw athleticism and threw for 3,567 yards and 28 touchdowns last season, but he lacks elite NFL processing speed.
Sean McVay knows how to mold young talent. He squeezed MVP-level production out of a raw Jared Goff nearly a decade ago. But developing a rookie takes extreme patience—a luxury the Rams do not have. The sun beats down on the SoFi Stadium turf, demanding immediate fireworks. Rodgers delivers exactly that.
Last year in Pittsburgh, Rodgers defied Father Time. He pushed through a fractured non-throwing wrist to throw for 3,322 yards and 24 touchdowns, leading the Steelers to a gritty AFC North title. Taking him from the freezing, physical AFC North to the pristine conditions of Los Angeles makes almost too much sense. You could almost feel the tension radiating from the Steelers’ front office as Rodgers recently appeared at a charity flag football tournament in March, remaining totally silent on his future.
“You don’t sit on your hands when a four-time MVP is just a phone call away. You make the move. We want to win Super Bowls, not just win September.”
— Anonymous NFC West Executive
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
If the Rams pull the trigger and sign Rodgers, the entire NFC playoff picture shifts overnight. Los Angeles instantly morphs into a heavy Super Bowl contender, armed with a veteran who can execute McVay’s complex offensive schemes blindfolded. They can then flip that No. 13 pick to draft an elite edge rusher or trade back to accumulate Day 2 capital to restock their secondary.
For Pittsburgh, losing Rodgers is a nightmare scenario. The Steelers passed on drafting Jaxson Dart last year to build around the veteran. If Rodgers bolts for the West Coast, head coach Mike McCarthy faces a massive hole under center with spring workouts looming. They will have to scramble for a bridge option like Kirk Cousins just to keep their heads above water in a brutal division.

