After spending much of his offseason recovering from a right elbow injury, veteran quarterback Matthew Stafford resumed throwing as the Los Angeles Rams opened training camp on Sunday.
"It feels good to get out there," Stafford said. "Definitely knocking some rust off and feeling it again. It's good to get out there and stress it a little bit and see how it reacts."
Stafford, who helped lead the Rams to a Super Bowl title last season, has rested his arm since February and received an anti-inflammatory injection in his elbow.
Stafford and head coach Sean McVay have said that the 14th-year quarterback will have to ease back into a full workload after taking so much time off.
"It's an interesting thing trying to have a little bit of governor on there, and at the same time, just trying to be as smart as I can," Stafford said. "It's a process. Just going to have to sit there and work through it, trust it. We'll figure it out as we go."
McVay told reporters that while Stafford is on a pitch count, it didn’t come into play in Sunday’s camp-opening session.
"[Stafford] was a full participant today," McVay said. "Like him having as much experience as he does, we will continue to build him up.
"We're aware of what that pitch count is, but it didn't restrict him from being able to do anything today."
Acquired last offseason from the Detroit Lions, Stafford was a key reason why the Rams got over the hump to win their first Super Bowl since the 1999 season.
Stafford tied a career high last season with 41 touchdown passes and registered a 102.9 passer rating, starting all 17 games.
He added nine more touchdown passes during the Rams’ postseason run, including six to Super Bowl MVP Cooper Kupp.