Records are meant to be broken — and for the Los Angeles Rams, that reality creates one of the more interesting storylines of the next few seasons. Some franchise marks feel untouchable, preserved by eras, opportunity, and Hall of Fame careers. Others suddenly begin to look vulnerable when a roster has continuity at quarterback, explosive skill talent, and a coaching staff willing to push the pace.
The Rams enter this chapter with several active players already climbing franchise leaderboards and
putting both single-season and all-time offensive records in play. Whether it is passing totals, receiving production, touchdowns, or efficiency-based milestones, today’s roster includes players with legitimate opportunities to challenge names that have long defined Rams history.
Single Season Records:
Passing Yards – 4,886 yards
Current record holder: Matthew Stafford
Matthew Stafford is the only viable option to top his current franchise leading stat. Stafford set the record in 2021, his first year with the Rams. Stafford fell less than 200 yards short of eclipsing his mark in 2025.
Probability: 35%
Passing TDs – 46
Current record holder: Matthew Stafford
Once again, Stafford is the current record holder but the only realistic option at this point in time. 46 touchdowns is a bold number to try to top yet again. Can he do it? Yes. Will he do it? That would be wild.
Probability: 5%
Rushing Yards – 2,105
Current record holder: Eric Dickerson
The popular pick might be Kyren Williams, but I don’t think Williams has enough break away speed to ever make 2000+ yards a feasible option. Blake Corum could, as he has a little bit more acceleration in his game. It would have to be in a future season in which Kyren Williams is no longer with the team and the two running backs are splitting carries.
Probability: 1%
Rushing TDs – 18
Current record holder: Marshall Faulk & Eric Dickerson
Kyren Williams has 10, 14, and 12 rushing touchdowns in the previous three seasons. 2026 might actually be a sneaky year for him to contend for that franchise mark because teams could try to sell out for taking away Mr. Automatic – Davante Adams on fade routes.
Probability: 35%
Receptions – 145
Current record holder: Cooper Kupp
The only player worthy of this category is Puka Nacua. Matthew Stafford’s security blanket. With 129 receptions in 2025, it is fair to believe that Kupp’s record could very well be broken in 2026, especially if the Rams are relying heavily on 13 personnel – Puka being the lone WR on the field.
Probability: 70%
Receiving Yards – 1,947
Current record holder: Cooper Kupp
Puka’s old teammate and mentor may have given him the knowledge and habits to become one of the all time greats in the league. Puka 1,715 yards in 2025 appears a lot closer considering he missed half of the Baltimore Ravens game and the Week 7 game versus the Jacksonville Jaguars.
Probability: 90%
Receiving TDs – 17
Current record holder: Elroy “Crazylegs” Hirsch
If Davante Adams had not gotten hurt in the Detroit game, he very well could have grabbed this record from Hirsch last year. Puka Nacua has never had big touchdown numbers, so Davante Adams is still the more realistic option.
Probability: 50%
All-Time Records:
Passing Yards – 23,758
Current record holder: Jim Everett
This record will likely come at the end of the season. If Stafford throws for 4352, he will pass Jim Everett for the all time passing leader mark. Stafford has eclipsed that number twice in 2 of his 5 LAR seasons.
Probability: 99%
Passing TDs – 142
Current record holder: Jim Everett
Stafford is 1 touchdown away from tying Everett for the all time lead. Breaking the record against the 49ers in Australia seems appropriate.
Probability: 99.9%
Rushing Yards – 10,138
Current record holder: Steven Jackson
Jackson’s 10,000+ yards is up there. Kyren Williams sits at 3,834 yards currently, so he has work to do. I don’t see him getting there as a Ram and no one else on the roster makes sense.
Probability: 3%
Rushing TDs – 58
Current record holder: Marshall Faulk
Kyren Williams does have a shot here. He has 36 touchdowns, making his deficit of 22 a reasonable number. I expect Kyren to get more opportunities in 2026 with teams aiming to take away Davante Adams instead.
Probability: 65%
Receptions – 942
Current record holder: Isaac Bruce
Puka will be the only consideration for the next three categories because of the current roster structure, personnel design, and game strategy. The football runs through Matthew Stafford and Puka Nacua. He stands at 313 receptions, currently 1/3 of the way to Isaac Bruce’s record. Puka will need to play at least 6 more healthy seasons with Los Angeles to consider breaking the receptions record.
Probability: 10%
Receiving Yards – 14,109
Current record holder: Isaac Bruce
Puka currently sits at 4191 yards. Another 10,000 yards is a long way to go. The biggest factor will be health as Puka’s style is violent with the number of hits he absorbs. I actually do not think Puka will top that mark as it would require 7 more seasons of at least 1400 yards per season. With the NFL landscape trending towards young players at the running back and wide receiver position, it is difficult to envision a record falling here.
Probability: 1%
Receiving TDs – 84
Current record holder: Isaac Bruce
Puka Nacua started slow in this department in his rookie and sophomore years, only finding the endzone 9 times in 28 games. In 2025, he surpassed that by scoring 10 times. 84 total touchdowns is a strong number. Only 15 players in NFL history have 85 or more touchdowns all time, let alone for one franchise like Isaac Bruce. Once again, it would take a lot of time for this record to fall if it does at all.
Probability: 0.1%













