The Rams Have 1 Of The NFL’s Brightest Young Minds — And They Know It

The Los Angeles Rams didn’t just keep an assistant coach this offseason — they held onto one of the fastest-rising offensive minds in football, even in the face of poaching attempts by the Buccaneers and Jaguars.

Nate Scheelhaase, who joined Sean McVay’s staff in 2024 as the team’s pass game specialist, has quickly earned a reputation around the league as a sharp, innovative teacher with a quarterback’s eye and a coordinator’s command. In 2025, he’ll take on an even larger role as the Rams’ passing game coordinator — a clear sign of how valued he is inside the building, and how critical his voice has become in shaping the future of the offense.

Los Angeles Rams Get Big Picture Communicator In Nate Scheelhaase

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“We’ve been really fortunate to have Nate,” McVay said this week. “He’s a great coach, a rare communicator, and incredibly sharp. His perspective is big-picture. He makes everyone around him better.”

Scheelhaase’s trajectory has been swift but steady. A former star quarterback at Illinois, he climbed the collegiate coaching ladder before becoming offensive coordinator at Iowa State. In his first NFL season last year, he immediately impressed McVay and his staff — not only with his technical understanding of modern offenses, but with his ability to connect with players and build trust across position groups.

Scheelhaase’s ascent is no fluke. At Iowa State, he elevated the Cyclones’ offense from 20.2 to 26.2 points per game and coached quarterback Brock Purdy during his college development. His red zone efficiency — a staggering 31-for-33 scoring rate — foreshadowed the Rams’ desire to improve in that very area. That résumé made him an ideal successor to Jake Peetz, part of a pipeline that has historically propelled Rams assistants to coordinator and head coach roles.

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“Great generals need great lieutenants,” one insider said of the hire — and McVay seems to agree. Scheelhaase isn’t just drawing up concepts. He’s translating complex systems for a young offense, helping bridge the Rams’ post-rebuild era. For a team likely to load up on offensive playmakers in 2025, his continued presence is a quiet but pivotal win.

Scheelhaase Add Additional Level Of Continuity

While the Rams’ coaching ranks saw some offseason turnover — including Nick Caley’s departure to Houston — Scheelhaase’s continued presence ensures stability and growth in the most important phase of the team’s development: the evolution of a post-LeBron offense built around quarterback Matthew Stafford and a younger wave of skill players.

Internally, there’s a sense that Scheelhaase could be a future offensive coordinator — and perhaps more — either in Los Angeles or elsewhere. The fact that the Rams get at least one more season with him is a quiet but meaningful win in a year of transition.

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“He’s got such a humility about him,” McVay said. “You see why he had success in college, and why so many people are starting to recognize what he brings at this level. We’re lucky to be able to keep building with him.”

As the Rams continue to retool around a new generation of offensive weapons, including rising receivers like Puka Nacua, Scheelhaase’s role will only grow. Whether he’s helping McVay scheme passing concepts, mentoring young wideouts, or fine-tuning Stafford’s late-career production, his fingerprints are all over the Rams’ offensive identity.

In a league constantly searching for the next big thing, the Rams might already have theirs — and they’re not letting go just yet.

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