"Donald Wins Sports Illustrated's Performer of the Year" & more AD stuff

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  • #94984
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    Rams DT Aaron Donald Wins Sports Illustrated’s Performer of the Year Award

    https://www.si.com/sportsperson/2018/12/06/aaron-donald-sports-illustrated-performer-year-rams

    Los Angeles Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald has been selected as Sports Illlustrated’s Performer of the Year.

    Donald, 27, is putting together the best season of his career in 2018 and heads into Week 14 leading the NFL in sacks (16.5), tackles for loss (20) and quarterback hits (32). He has also tallied four forced fumbles, which is tied for fourth most in the NFL. Each of Donald’s forced fumbles have been recovered by the Rams and either been returned for a touchdown or led to one on the team’s next possession.

    The standout tackle won Defensive Player of the Year in 2017 and is on pace to win the award again this season. Donald’s name has also come up in the conversation for the league MVP award, which is typically given to quarterbacks and offensive players. Only two defensive players have ever won the award – Lawrence Taylor with the Giants in 1986 and the Vikings’ Alan Page in 1971.

    Donald, a four-time Pro Bowler,embodies the Performer of the Year title, which is awarded to an individual who leaves their mark on the 2018 season.

    SI’s Sportsperson of the Year award ceremony will take place on Dec. 11 at the Beverly Hills Hotel in Los Angeles. It will be telecast on NBCSN on Dec. 13 at 9 p.m. ET. Comedian and actor Joel McHale will host this year’s event.

    #95066
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    Peter King

    from https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/12/10/miami-miracle-dolphins-bears-chiefs-mahomes-fmia-nfl-week-14-peter-king/

    ————-

    Regarding the debate over the MVP, and whether defensive tackle Aaron Donald should be a legitimate prime candidate for the award, I have three thoughts:

    1. The name of the award is “Most Valuable Player,” not “Best Player, Regardless of Position,” or “Most Outstanding Player.” And it’s hard to think that a defensive tackle, even one as incredibly good as Donald, would contribute as much to a very good team as a top quarterback would to a very good team.

    2. Putting emotion aside, ask this question: What would the record of the Rams—11-1 after 12 games—be without Donald, versus the record of the Saints (10-2) without Drew Brees or the Chiefs (10-2) without Patrick Mahomes? (Or even the Rams without Jared Goff or Todd Gurley?)

    3. I asked Pro Football Focus to calculate the WAR (Wins Above Replacement), the metric showing how many wins each player is worth to his team versus an average player at the position, in the NFL after 13 weeks. The PFF list of WAR for the candidates most often mentioned as MVP candidates, and including Donald:

    Patrick Mahomes, 6.22
    Drew Brees, 6.22
    Philip Rivers, 4.55
    Jared Goff, 4.37
    Russell Wilson, 3.59
    Deshaun Watson, 2.20
    Aaron Donald, 1.82
    Todd Gurley, 0.56

    Interesting that the value of the defensive tackle for the Rams is higher than the value of the running back, in the eyes of PFF.

    Donald’s WAR is significantly higher than any other defensive player; Bobby Wagner (1.49) is next.

    #95082
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    Seth Walder, ESPN Analytics: http://www.espn.com/espn/now?nowId=21-41048198-4

    the Bears held Aaron Donald to his lowest pass rush win rate game of the season (18%) on Sunday. Donald entered the day with season PRWR of 43% — best among all qualified pass rushers. Bears left guard James Daniels was Donald’s most frequent primary blocker in the game, and he held Donald to a 17% PRWR when that was the case. Overall, the Rams were held to a season-low pass rush win rate of 28%. They entered Week 14 with the third-highest team PRWR of 61%. PRWR is an ESPN metric that uses NFL Next Gen Stats.

    #95093
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    It’s not always clear that Donald’s first strip sack of Mahomes from the Chiefs game, the one that led to the Ebukam TD, AD had actually hurled himself through the air and was practically parallel to the ground when he made the play.

    #95160
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    #95171
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    ==

    How Rams’ Aaron Donald Is Redefining the Defensive Tackle Position in the NFL
    Los Angeles’s defensive tackle stands out in the league, for more than just his drive, brute strength and creativity.

    ROBERT KLEMKO

    https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/12/12/los-angeles-rams-aaron-donald-performer-of-the-year-pass-rusher

    This story appears in the Dec. 17-24, 2018, issue of Sports Illustrated.

    Mere weeks after the Rams’ season had ended in a first-round playoff loss to the Falcons, and just days after he had accepted the 2017 NFL Defensive Player of the Year Award, Aaron Donald went back to work last February and came clean to his longtime personal trainer. “Him getting MVP, he told me he didn’t deserve it,” says Dewayne Brown. “He felt like he wasn’t playing his best football yet.”

    Two months earlier, not long before the Pro Bowl teams were announced, a Rams media relations staffer had approached Donald to go over the interview schedule that would coincide with his fourth nomination in as many seasons. Donald interrupted her and asked, “You think I’ll make it?”

    Julia Faron laughed until she saw Donald’s expression. “Oh, you’re serious?” she said. “Yeah, I think you’ll make it.”

    None of it surprised Brown, who has been working with the 27-year-old tackle since he was at Penn Hills High in Pittsburgh. “That’s how he is,” Brown says. “He’s on some Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan type stuff.”

    When they first started training, Donald was a pudgy junior who was just catching the workout bug. But soon he became obsessed. If the teenager who topped out at 6’1″ couldn’t become the prototypical hulking gap-stuffer, he figured he would be something … different.

    On his way to sweeping the Nagurski, Bednarik, Lombardi and Outland awards as a senior at Pitt, Donald morphed into a pass-rushing menace who showed up at Rams camp three years ago weighing 280 pounds, with less than 10% body fat. Even more cut now, he has 55½ sacks in 75 games—the most by any player to start his career—and, with three games left in 2018, he’s six sacks shy of matching Michael Strahan’s single-season record of 22½.

    Yet this son of a bus driver (that would be his mom) wonders if he’s good enough to be a Pro Bowler or worthy of one of the NFL’s highest honors. “You never know,” Donald says, with no hint of irony. “There are a lot of good football players in the league. You just try to keep yourself grounded.”

    That mind-set is what makes great players fun to be around, says Wade Phillips, the veteran defensive coordinator who came to Los Angeles last season. “Guys with that ability and that drive, they all have the same tendencies,” Phillips says. “They’re not full of themselves. They don’t think of themselves as the best and they’re not satisfied.”

    Phillips, 71, is the envy of nearly every DC in the league. Ask any offensive-minded coach to name the most disruptive defenders—those who eliminate the biggest chunks of opponents’ playbooks simply by being on the field—and Donald is always in the top two. “The obvious ones are [Broncos outside linebacker] Von Miller and Aaron Donald,” says 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan. “You want to attack weaknesses, but players like that hide a lot of problems. Defenses can be a lot more aggressive in coverage because people are scared to attempt certain plays, because the odds of getting sacked are way too high.”

    Yet unlike his peers in the pass rushers’ pantheon, Donald does his damage from the interior of the line.

    When Phillips coached the Eagles from 1986 to ’88, he moved Hall of Fame lineman Reggie White to the outside to utilize his speed and prevent him from getting swallowed up by double-teams on critical passing downs. Phillips did the same with the Texans’ J.J. Watt from 2011 to ’13. The edge is also where Miller and Khalil Mack, the Bears’ linebacker, line up in order to create havoc. But Donald, Phillips says, “supersedes that theory that you need to move him outside. He cuts the corner so quick on a guard, like a defensive end would do, but with less space.”

    And he leaves a lasting impression. Talk to a guard who has played Donald, and he’ll tell you he hasn’t faced a similar challenge. “He can scratch his knees standing up, but he still has that natural pad level where he can lift you up and forklift you,” says Denver’s Connor McGovern. “You can’t replicate it. There’s nobody that’s ever done it like him. He does this crazy move where he bull-rushes and then he literally jumps off the ground and sheds you.”

    Donald calls that move the “power pop,” something he developed with former L.A. defensive line coach Mike Waufle. “Power to one side and pop off to the other side once you feel the weight switch,” Donald says. “Me jumping up and pulling myself through is extra momentum I use to try to explode to the quarterback a little faster.”

    There’s one more thing Donald does, which no other defensive tackle even tries, much less replicates. When teams slide the protection his way, sending the center to help a guard block him, Donald will often sprint to the outside shoulder of the guard, disarm his hands with a slap, and bounce off the inside shoulder of the tackle on his way to the quarterback.

    “He understands they’re going to try to overset him and the center’s coming with him,” says Rams offensive lineman Rodger Saffold. “In order to beat that, he goes outside because a lot of guards have trouble blocking the outside when they double-team. To get upfield he uses the tackle as leverage to get back on his angle [to the quarterback]. And then, just when you think you need to set wide, he hits you with a bull-rush and now you’re floating backward. Good luck.”

    Attempting unconventional moves requires freedom, which Donald has enjoyed since entering the league as the 13th pick in 2014. During OTAs as a rookie, Donald was watching film when his new position coach, Waufle, joined him for a one-on-one chat before a position-wide session. “He came in and said, ‘I’m going to say a lot of things in this meeting but I don’t want you to listen to anything I’m saying,'” Donald recalls. “‘I just want to watch you play and learn from you. Go out there and fly around.’

    “It was surprising. Most guys have to earn that,” Donald says. “When you have your coach telling you that as a rookie, it gives you a lot of confidence, makes you feel comfortable. He wanted to see if what I did in college could translate.”

    It did.

    With 18 tackles for loss, 13 quarterback hits and nine sacks, Donald was named Defensive Rookie of the Year. He kept working with Brown in the offseason, telling his trainer in moments of mid-workout anguish, “If this s— didn’t work, I wouldn’t do it.” He also began to understand how offensive lines call out their protection slides, and what’s coming when they don’t. That’s why you’ll see Donald crouching just before the snap, scanning the line and the backfield, the last player to put his hand down in the ready position.

    He also started studying linemen on an individual basis, watching even more film on his off days. “I used to stay late and watch film and every time I’d walk in he’d be in there, last guy in the building,” says Eagles defensive end Chris Long, a former teammate. Then Donald started studying backups to prepare to face them. “I could tell that he knew what my weaknesses were,” McGovern admits.

    Along the way Donald started thinking about bigger goals, beyond Pro Bowls and year-end awards. He’s always wanted to win a Super Bowl, but now he wants a gold jacket too. “Yeah, I think about the Hall of Fame,” Donald says. “I don’t do all this training to be good. I want to be great, I want to be mentioned with the best to ever play the game.”

    Miller, a sack virtuoso in his own right, says that what Donald’s done in five short seasons has already made him near peerless. “It’s hate if I can’t tell you the truth,” Miller says. “He has the flame right now, and he’s had it for a long time.”

    #95346
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    Is the Rams’ defense too reliant on Aaron Donald?

    The Rams are 16-0 when Aaron Donald has a sack and 5-7 when he doesn’t.

    Is the Rams' defense too reliant on Aaron Donald?

    Cameron DaSilva

    Aaron Donald might be the best overall player in the NFL. Few players, let alone defenders, in today’s game demand the amount of attention that Donald does. When an opponent begins setting its game plan for attacking the Rams’ defense, the first conversation is likely, “How do we stop Aaron Donald.”

    There isn’t an easy answer to that question, but teams are beginning to realize that doing anything possible to slow him down often comes with positive results – even if it means leaving offensive linemen or tight ends in one-on-one situations outside.

    The Rams simply don’t have another player who can consistently win those battles to make opponents pay for focusing so much attention on Donald. It’s become a real problem for Los Angeles, too.

    Nick Foles wasn’t sacked a single time on Sunday night and was hit just three times – twice by Ndamukong Suh and once by Donald. Dante Fowler Jr. made two total tackles, Samson Ebukam barely had his name called and Michael Brockers did very little in the way of rushing the passer.

    When Donald doesn’t get sacks, the Rams have a hard time winning. Since 2017, when Donald has a sack, the Rams are undefeated. When he puts up a bagel in that department, the Rams are just 5-7 – and 6-8 if you include games he didn’t play.

    That’s no coincidence, either. Donald makes game-changing plays, often forcing fumbles or turnovers by either sacking the quarterback or pressuring them into poor throws. And when Donald doesn’t get a sack, other defenders hardly ever do, either.

    In the six games that he’s been blanked in the sack column this season, the Rams have four total sacks. They don’t have a single game with multiple sacks when Donald doesn’t have one of his own. That just goes to show that the Rams have some serious trouble getting to the quarterback without the help of the Defensive Player of the Year.

    Just looking at the season stats, that’s easy to see. Of the team’s 34 sacks, Donald has nearly half of them (16.5). The next-closest player is an off-ball linebacker in Cory Littleton (4.0), followed by Ndamukong Suh (3.5) and Samson Ebukam (3.0).

    Until another Rams defender or two steps up and makes teams pay for leaving them on an island in order to double or triple Donald, this is how life is going to be for No. 99. And when he doesn’t get to the quarterback, the Rams’ chances of winning drop significantly.

    #95805
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