I see it different.
With the exception of Gurley they have the exact same offense they had last year. That offense finished 7th in 2019. It wouldn't be the worst thing in the world if they finished 7th again this year if the D and special teams pick it up.
Gurley's production last year: 20th in rushing yards, 38th in yards per carry (among RBs with at least 400 yards rushing), no run longer than 25 yards, 31 catches for 207 yards. I obviously can't say that it's easy to replace that, but in all honesty the 2019 version of Gurley didn't set the bat all that high.
Expect Whit and Hav to get out of the box a little faster this year. Superbowl hangover? The price you pay for not playing preseason? Whatever - they were both subpar for the first few/several weeks. I'm sure McVay & Kromer are aware, and I think Whit (and possibly Hav) have enough personal pride to correct this. We'll see ...
Expect a better interior OL than Noteboom-Allen-Blythe. Heck, if they just trot out the guys they finished the season with (Corbett-Blythe-Edwards) they'll be light years ahead of the game.
Will Goff take a step forward? Will Higbee pick up where he left off? My money is on both of them.
Cooks and his concussions: worrisome, for sure. An offseason to recover, maybe he bounces back? We'll see ...
Woods and Kupp? I have no concerns about either of them.
Virtually all of the Rams turnover is on defense. And it seems intentional. I don't know if it will work out, but I don't think anyone in the Rams front office is saying OMG we lost Brockers, Fowler, NRC, Littleton, and Matthews: what are we going to do?!?
The defense finished 20th last year. They're headed in a different direction. And they need a few different pieces to make the new D work. (That's the theory as I see it, anyway. Again, we'll see ...)
AlbaNY_Ram