girls Published by SoCal Flag Jun 20, 2026 News Brief

Rams Use Women's History Month to Grow Girls Flag Football Pathways

The Los Angeles Rams highlighted girls flag football with USA Football talent identification, youth competition and women-in-sports programming.

By SoCal Flag · Source: Los Angeles Rams

Female athlete throwing a football on a field representing girls flag football pathways
Female athlete throwing a football on a field, used as a rights-safe visual for girls flag football pathways. · Image: Willians Huerta / Pexels

The Los Angeles Rams used Women's History Month to highlight girls flag football as both a participation opportunity and a pathway sport, with programming that connected young athletes to USA Football evaluation, local competition and women working across the football industry.

The Rams' official recap, published Apr. 10, 2026 at 08:00 AM, centered on a month of events tied to the growth of women's flag football. The biggest on-field piece was a Talent Identification Flag Football Camp hosted with USA Football, where more than 300 athletes ages 10 to 18 took part in drills, scrimmages and combine-style testing.

At a Glance

  • Organizer: Los Angeles Rams.
  • Primary Focus: Women's History Month programming connected to girls flag football growth.
  • Source Published: Apr. 10, 2026 at 08:00 AM.
  • Talent ID Camp: More than 300 athletes ages 10 to 18 participated in drills, scrimmages and combine-style testing.
  • Partner: USA Football personnel evaluated athletes at the talent identification event.
  • Pathway: Top performers were invited toward Select Teams or U.S. National Team Trials in 15U and 17U divisions.
  • Local Events: The Rams also highlighted the Girls Flag Football Spring Classic and Shell Academic Challenge.

Why It Matters for Girls Flag Football

This is the kind of programming that turns flag football from a popular youth sport into a recognizable pathway. A local clinic is valuable by itself, but a USA Football talent identification camp adds a next-step structure: athletes can be evaluated, identified and pointed toward higher levels of competition.

The Rams' recap also placed girls flag football inside a broader Women's History Month frame. That matters because the sport's growth is not only about more games. It is also about visibility, leadership and showing young athletes that football spaces can include women as players, coaches, staff members and decision-makers.

"Football is a sport for everyone."

The Rams attributed that message to Noel Grigsby, their Manager of Social Justice and Football Development. It is a simple line, but it lands because girls flag football is still fighting for access in many places even as the sport moves toward the 2028 Olympics.

What to Watch Next

For Southern California families, the key takeaway is that local NFL clubs are becoming part of the girls flag football ecosystem. Rams and Chargers events can expose players to coaching, competition, national-team language and college-style pathways before those opportunities are fully standardized.

The next things to watch are repeat events, published registration windows and whether identified athletes move into USA Football Select Team or National Team Trial opportunities. Those details are what parents, coaches and players need early, before rosters and tryout windows close.

SoCal Flag will keep tracking Rams, Chargers and USA Football events that create real next steps for girls flag football players in Southern California.

Related Topics

Los Angeles Rams girls flag football women's flag football USA Football Southern California flag football youth flag football flag football pathways LA28 high school flag football
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