
Josh Pearcy and Jamil Muhammad have their work cut out
At first glance, the Los Angeles Rams edge unit seems a position of strength. Of the main characters, Jared Verse looks to be a star on the rise, Byron Young has produced two solid seasons, and L.A. used a Round 3 pick in the 2025 draft to add Josiah Stewart, a highly-projected college edge.
After the Top 3, there’s not a lot of clarity. Both Brennan Jackson and Nick Hampton battled injuries last season. Jackson got behind in camp with a soft tissue problem and lingering issues limited his rookie year to being active in only eight games. Hampton did special teams work until tearing a pectoral muscle and shutting down in Week 13. Keir Thomas enters his fourth season with the Rams and although not prototypical in size or athleticism, has the most on-field experience, playing in 17 games with 204 defensive snaps and 147 on special teams.
In addition to drafting Stewart, L.A. brought in two undrafted free agents to compete. Let’s take a capsule look at them.
Meet the candidates
Jamil Muhammad – USC 6’ 1” 254 lb. 32 3/4” arms 10” hands
Pro Day: 1.67/4.83 forty 7.18 shuttle 4.47 3cone 31” vert 9’ 6” broad 25 reps
Fifth-year senior was a high school All-Region quarterback and originally signed with Vanderbilt. Muhammad did not suit up for the Commodores before moving to Georgia State for three seasons and switching to the defensive side. For the Panthers, he accrued 10 starts in 34 games with 70 tackles, 11 for loss, and 7.5 sacks. He transferred to USC for the 2023 and ‘24 seasons, starting 22 of 26 games and posting 73 tackles, 12 for loss, and 7.5 sacks.
Muhammad’s frame is on the short/squatty side compared to NFL edge standards, but has adequate length and good upper body strength. He uses this natural low leverage to his advantage, whether on the bullrush or using a long arm move and spinning off of it. Although not a gifted athlete, he does have a loose body with short area agility, a good first step, and change of direction. I not sure if it means anything, but Muhammad lined up primarily on the short side of the field. He makes short drops into coverage smoothly and is a good tackler. He gets a lot of hustle/effort sacks, staying aware of where the ball goes and hustling to it in pursuit.
As defensive ends go, Muhammad is still in the learning stage of the position and getting used to 40+ pounds he’s had to add. He’s bulked up to a similar frame as Rams Round 3 draftee, Josiah Stewart. Muhammad showed he could step up in class by having a strong first season at USC, but fell off a bit in stats and starts in Year 2. He checks off a lot of L.A.’s late-round boxes, smart, 100% effort, stepping up in class, and special teams experience.
https://t.co/tgTkZuJusk
Jamil Muhammad (USC) is an Edge with an EDGE #ProOne— Tyler Mann (@Mann_Tyler) April 21, 2025
Josh Pearcy – Rice 6’ 2” 238 lb. 34 3/4” arms 9 1/4” hands
Pro Day: 1.71/4.99 forty 7.43 shuttle 4.50 3cone 36” vert 10’ 2” broad 23 reps
Sixth-year senior chose Rice for athletics and academics. After a four-game redshirt season, Pearcy went on to play in 54 total games for the Owls, chalking up 210 tackles, 33 for loss, 16 sacks, and defended three passes. He worked his way into starting role with hard work on special teams, being named a captain while playing on both coverage and return units. He was a distance sprinter in high school.
Well put together frame with room for more, particularly with his long legs. Pearcy showed versatility in where lined up. Rice used a base 4-2-5 defense where he was on the edge, either upright or with a hand in the dirt. They also used a 3-3-5 stack package where he played as an off-ball linebacker. He’s a effort player that needs to improve his stack/shed ability. Hard to find extended film of Rice defense and he played as part of a rotation, his 2023 film looks more instinctive and active. Good in pursuit and tackling.
Edge Players at Pearcy’s size and overall athleticism face an uphill battle in the NFL and the versatility to play off-ball linebacker could help greatly. Realistically, hIs path is to catch eyes with hustle and effort in practice and take advantage of special teams work in preseason games. Another hard-working, smart player with the developmental traits the Rams covet for the bottom half of their roster.
Josh Pearcy is the 15th winner of the OJ Brigance Award.https://t.co/BMsFknTJrs
— Rice Football (@RiceFootball) April 13, 2024
These candidates face long odds
Unless injuries decimate the edge room, the likelihood of making the opening roster is nil. Since the Rams will could easily start the season with four edge players and three of those spots are locked in (Verse, Young, Stewart), a more realistic battle for these two prospects is for one practice squad slot.
Both have the advantage of extended work on special teams and fit the Rams mold of smart, high-effort play. Muhammad has good film versus top competition, while Pearcy has two position versatility potential. To make it, both need to really flash in camp and/or preseason games.