Andrew Whitworth Explains What Sets Sean McVay Apart From Less Successful NFL Coaches

The former Rams tackle discussed how his coach challenged him to be a better man.
Andrew Whitworth Explains What Sets Sean McVay Apart From Less Successful NFL Coaches
Andrew Whitworth Explains What Sets Sean McVay Apart From Less Successful NFL Coaches /
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From a national profile standpoint, the biggest non-coaching winner of the Rams' success over the last seven years might be former tackle Andrew Whitworth.

After 11 workmanlike years with the Bengals, Whitworth moved to Los Angeles for some of the best years of his career, won a Super Bowl and parlayed his success into a job on Amazon's Thursday Night Football panel.

Whitworth has only positive things to say about Rams coach Sean McVay. On a Wednesday morning hit on This is Football with ESPN's Kevin Clark, the four-time Pro Bowler outlined what characteristics set McVay apart from his peers.

"It really starts with his ability to communicate," Whitworth said. "People talk about his intelligence level, they talk about his genius play-calling. ... To me, you walk in a room with Sean McVay and his ability to communicate sticks out to me."

Whitworth stressed McVay's expert at translating his specific vision for his teams, and noted his emphasis on character.

"The most impressive thing I've ever seen—11 years in the league, I move over to Los Angeles. His first four weeks of OTAs as a 30-year-old, the youngest head coach in NFL history,” Whitworth said. “We spent the first hour or so of team meetings for the first four weeks he had the job explaining what football character looked like.”

That, to Whitworth, is why McVay has been so transformational since his hiring.

"A lot of teams that suck right now, it's because their head coaches are scared to challenge their players as men to act like men," Whitworth said.


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Patrick Andres
PATRICK ANDRES

Patrick Andres is a staff writer on the Breaking and Trending News team at Sports Illustrated. He joined SI in December 2022, having worked for The Blade, Athlon Sports, Fear the Sword and Diamond Digest. Andres has covered everything from zero-attendance Big Ten basketball to a seven-overtime college football game. He is a graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism with a double major in history .