Los Angeles Rams Fantasy Start/Sit: Matthew Stafford, Puka Nacua, Colby Parkinson Top Options Tonight

Dominate Week 16 with expert Los Angeles Rams fantasy analysis. Who should you start and sit in this exciting Thursday night matchup?

The fantasy football landscape shifts dramatically after Week 16, as unexpected performances and emerging storylines reshape our expectations for the season ahead. Some players exceed all projections, while others leave managers scratching their heads, wondering if early concerns were justified or merely a case of growing pains.

Thursday night’s Los Angeles Rams-Seattle Seahawks matchup could provide crucial clarity on several key start/sit situations for both NFC powerhouses. Get ready to dive deep into the developments that could make or break your fantasy team’s Week 16 performance.

PFSN Dynasty Trade Calculator
Not sure if you're winning that trade? Use PFSN's FREE Dynasty Trade Calculator to find out!

Matthew Stafford, QB

Sportsbooks are labeling Matthew Stafford as a heavy favorite to walk away from this season with the MVP trophy, and that’s great, but I’m benching him in the semifinals of my playoffs if at all possible.

Having access to Puka Nacua means a big week is never far away, but we saw this Seattle defense get under Stafford’s skin back in Week 11 (19 yards on his 11 pressured passes), and with Davante Adams (hamstring) likely sidelined, I’m not sold on the reward outweighing the risk.

This is now a two-headed backfield that showcased their upside last week against the Lions (Kyren Williams and Blake Corum turned 26 carries into 149 yards and three scores), and given the pack of the Seahawks, are we positive that Stafford throws the ball 35 times?

32 times?

Without the rushing ability to add cheap points to his profile and (likely) Adams to transform RB dives into WR fades, Stafford scoring under 17 fantasy points for the seventh time is something I view as more likely than not to happen.

I wouldn’t play Trevor Lawrence over him in a brutal matchup, but C.J. Stroud against the Raiders? I would.

Blake Corum, RB

Remember when Tony Pollard was the lightning to Ezekiel Elliott’s thunder?

This isn’t that, but the efficiency of Corum over the past three weeks is nothing short of intoxicating.

  • 30 carries (100% gain rate)
  • 280 yards
  • 4 touchdowns

Two of those scores have come from the doorstep, one from 11 yards, and the other from 48. He has a 24+ yard run in all three of those contests and kind of looks like a player who ran for over 2,700 yards and scored 47 touchdowns over his final two collegiate seasons.

MORE: Fantasy Football Trade Analyzer

Until the Rams make this a hot hand situation and not a series-by-series one, I’m not going to be able to rank the secondary option as a flex-worthy play. His eight carries against these Seahawks in Week 11 gained just 10 yards, and that is the sort of floor that I fear in these tough matchups.

With Adams likely out, you could argue that there is more of a role to chase in scoring situations, but I’d push back and say that without the WR2, I’m not projecting as many scoring chances.

That means you’re getting a bigger piece of a smaller piece, and that essentially leaves you right where you started.

Even with all of the success, Corum’s next game with more than 13 touches will be his first this season, and he’s basically a zero in the passing game (if we are getting technical from a yardage standpoint, he’s actually been less than a zero since the beginning of November with -2 receiving yards).

He sits outside of my top 30 this week. He’s in the David Montgomery and Rhamondre Stevenson tier. There’s nothing wrong with that in a deeper format, but my guess is that in standard-sized leagues, you have a minimum of two running backs and three receivers that I’d rather play.

Kyren Williams, RB

It was a Williams game in Week 11 when these teams first met (12-91-1 on the ground while Corum ran eight times for 10 yards), and with him coming off of his third multi-TD effort of the season, he projects as the lead back, even if it’s not in a bellcow capacity.

My concern for him is the passing game. He had eight catches against the Niners back in Week 5, but he hasn’t caught more than two balls in a game since. That creates an uncomfortable floor situation should a short TD not go his way or Corum score from distance.

That said, with TD vulture Adams sidelined, Williams’ role in close is more valuable this week than most, and that positions him to be a top 15 RB to kick off this week.

Davante Adams, WR

Adams entered Week 15 with a hamstring injury and exited the week with it getting worse.

All signs point to him missing this game on short rest and, based on the first meeting (a one-yard TD being his only reception on eight targets), maybe that’s a blessing in disguise for fantasy managers in the semifinals.

MORE: Free Fantasy Waiver Wire Tool

Before the injury, he earned nine targets against the Lions, his most since Week 5, and while he only hauled in four (71 yards), that level of involvement would have me singing an optimistic tune given the value of where those targets come from for the veteran.

There isn’t a receiver that has my eye in Los Angeles. Still, this injury does open the door for Colby “the scoring machine” Parkinson to continue his surge as a viable streaming option at the position, something I never saw coming.

Puka Nacua, WR

Nacua is a warrior, and that’s all there is to it.

He’s relatable. Not in talent, I have no idea what it’s like to be among the best in the world at something, but he loves the sport and just wants to play. Nacua seems to love the competition, the contact, and everything in between. He’s about as easy a player to root for as there is in the league, and if you haven’t gone out of your way to watch a Rams game, I hope you enjoy this island game.

Nacua had a weird, bad drop in the first quarter last week, but it made no difference. This offense funnels everything they want to do through him, and the early mistake may have encouraged Stafford to feature his top threat at an even higher degree to ensure he remained engaged.

He caught nine of his other 10 targets for 181 yards, his second straight game with over 160 yards and third such performance of the season. Los Angeles even handed him the ball twice (zero carries in the three games prior), and I suspect we see more of that as the value of these games spikes.

For Week 16, even in a brutal matchup, Nacua sits atop my wide receiver rankings. Adams is likely to miss this game, and that only ramps up the volume further. In the Week 11 meeting against these stingy Seahawks, he had seven catches for 75 yards while all of his teammates combined had eight for 55.

He was also handed the ball twice in that contest. Sean McVay, Stafford, and you all want the same thing: it’s beautiful when things align like that, and that makes Nacua as inevitable as any receiver in the game today.

Colby Parkinson, TE

Is it possible that Rob Gronkowski walked so Colby Parkinson could run?

The Stanford product has scored in five of his past six games, a run that nearly had an asterisk on it after his first TD was highly questionable against the Lions, but he squashed those concerns with a second score later.

2016-25, Highest TD% By A TE (min.35 targets)

  1. 2020 Robert Tonyan: 18.6%
  2. 2024 Mark Andrews: 15.9%
  3. 2025 Parkinson: 15.8%
  4. 2017 OJ Howard: 15.4%
  5. 2016 Hunter Henry: 14.9%

It should go without saying that regression is to be expected, but regression can be a long-term thing, and we are very much in the short-term portion of the season.

MORE: Free Fantasy Start/Sit Lineup Optimizer

Parkinson has earned an end zone look in four straight games (three more than he had for the season prior), and all signs point to Adams (hamstring) being highly limited if not out altogether this week.

With an MVP candidate under center and the leader in end zone targets compromised at best, the situation around this unsustainable production is as advantageous as it’s been.

I was encouraged by the 9.0-yard aDOT on Sunday, a sign that Sean McVay is interested in exploring exactly what his emerging tight end can do vertically. This position has become harder, not easier, with time to rank (injuries to Daniel Jones and Patrick Mahomes, timeshares in Buffalo and Baltimore, etc.), and that has paved the way for Parkinson to enter my top 10 for the first time this season.

More Fantasy Football Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

More Fantasy Articles

Ideal Fantasy Football Landing Spots For Top Rookies: Jeremiyah Love, Carnell Tate, and More

Six draft prospects could see instant fantasy upside if they fall into these realistic landing spots during the selection process.

Rookie TE Combine Comp Analysis: Kenyon Sadiq Looks Like This Classic 49ers Tight End

Oregon TE Kenyon Sadiq is a freak athlete, not unlike this legendary San Francisco 49ers TE. Should fantasy managers be excited?

Superflex Dynasty Rookie Rankings: Jeremiyah Love Leads An Underwhelming Class

With the combine and the bulk of free agency behind us, let's take a look at our latest top 24 dynasty rookie rankings.