Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Silver & others postmortem the Rams 2019 season
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December 22, 2019 at 3:12 am #109608znModerator
Sean McVay vows to be better in wake of disappointing season
Michael Silver
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Sean McVay stood against the wall of a dimly lit hallway behind the visitors’ locker room at Levi’s Stadium on Saturday night, his face still flushed with frustration, his mind racing with regret.
Twenty minutes earlier, McVay had been overcome with nausea as he stood on the sideline watching Robbie Gould’s 33-yard field goal as time expired give the San Francisco 49ers a 34-31 victory over the Los Angeles Rams. The devastating defeat knocked the defending NFC champions out of playoff contention and sent McVay into what will surely be a protracted and relentless stretch of soul-searching. Now, as he tried to perform the early stages of the autopsy and break down what had gone wrong, the third-year coaching phenom looked 33 going on 83.
“I’m proud of the way we battled and fought, but I’m sick that we didn’t come out with the result, and I’m sick that we won’t be in the postseason,” McVay told me, shaking his head twice for emphasis. “Our season will end next week, and it’s a sickening feeling — and one that will drive me… Every. Single. Freaking. Day… until next season arrives, and we finally get to come out and take another swing.”
This wasn’t the only time McVay had felt tormented by a Rams (8-7) defeat in the past several months, but this one was particularly crushing, and not just because it slammed the door on their postseason dreams.
Unlike in L.A.’s shockingly flaccid Super Bowl LIII defeat to the New England Patriots last February — or the 20-7 beatdown it suffered against the Niners in mid-October, or last Sunday’s desultory thrashing at the hands of the Dallas Cowboys — the real Rams had shown up in Santa Clara on Saturday, and at times their precision and mettle were a sight to behold.
Pushed to the brink of elimination while facing a formidable 49ers (12-3) team which can wrap up the NFC’s No. 1 seed with a road victory against the Seattle Seahawks next Sunday, McVay had the Rams ready to play, and their urgency was palpable. He came up with a bold and brainy gameplan that put Jared Goff, a prototypical pocket passer, on the move for much of Saturday’s game — and the fourth-year quarterback delivered with a performance which, aside from one glaring blemish, ranked with the finest of his four-year career.
The Rams stunned the crowd of 70,103 by taking a 14-3 lead on the first play of the second quarter, on Todd Gurley’s second touchdown run. After the Niners began to assert themselves, L.A. twice fought back from second-half deficits, ultimately tying the game at 31 on Greg Zuerlein’s 52-yard field goal with 2:30 remaining.
And then, tantalizingly, it was there for the taking.
Twice, in the final two minutes, the Rams’ defense forced San Francisco into third-and-16 holes, seemingly setting the stage for Goff to get the ball back, with visions of a game-winning drive spinning through the quarterback’s head.
Twice, L.A. allowed quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo to convert, the second time on a coverage breakdown that led to a 46-yard hookup with wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders.
Eight yards and 32 seconds later, Gould came jogging onto the field and nailed his game-winner, provoking a raucous red-and-gold celebration, and sending the Rams spiraling into an offseason of introspection and uncomfortable unrest.
“We have a lot to fix,” Goff (27 of 46, 323 yards, two touchdowns and one cataclysmic interception) said softly as we spoke at his locker after the game. “I have a lot to fix, and I’m gonna do my part. Our standards are a lot higher than what we put on the field for most of this year. We made the playoffs the past two years, and now we won’t be playing past next week, and it’s gonna eat at me.”
When Goff looks back at the 2019 season, a campaign which began with him signing a lucrative contract extension, one play in particular will be hard to swallow. It happened with 56 seconds to go in the first half, five plays after Raheem Mostert’s 16-yard touchdown run had pulled the 49ers to within 21-17.
Facing a second-and-10 on the San Francisco 48, Goff took a shotgun snap and, for one of the few times all evening, stayed stationary in the pocket. He soon felt pressure from Nick Bosa, the Niners’ game-changing rookie edge rusher, and decided to dump the ball to running back Malcolm Brown and live to fight another down.
San Francisco, however, was in man-to-man coverage, and magnificent middle linebacker Fred Warner jumped the pass like an over-caffeinated tourist leaping aboard a cable car on Powell Street. Forty-six yards later, the Niners had a halftime lead — and Goff, who’d thrown so many sublime passes before and would deliver so many others after, had an image embedded into his psyche that won’t be easy to shake in the coming months.
“The pick six — I’m gonna think about that for a long time,” Goff said. “That’s a mistake I can’t make in that situation. I was just trying to get rid of the ball, and I knew it was man (coverage)… and I just can’t make that mistake. I think you learn from mistakes, and that’s one I feel like I won’t make again — but it’s one that I should never have made to begin with.
“It’s about how you respond, and after we do everything we can to beat Arizona (next Sunday), we’ve all got to get to work.”
Though the Rams didn’t exactly collapse in 2019, suffering narrow defeats to the Seahawks and Pittsburgh Steelers (along with Saturday’s) that eventually squashed their postseason hopes, McVay is realistic about the challenge that lies ahead. Though the franchise is short on draft picks (having traded their 2020 and 2021 first-round choices for cornerback Jalen Ramsey, who intercepted one first-half pass and forced another on Saturday) and tight on cap space, major changes could be coming.
Multiple sources expect there to be a shakeup on McVay’s coaching staff, perhaps including veteran defensive coordinator Wade Phillips. There could also be significant turnover in the personnel department. As for the roster, Gurley’s high salary and declining production may make him a cap casualty, and other key players could be traded or released as the organization builds around Goff on offense and star defensive tackle Aaron Donald on defense.
“I don’t know exactly what’s going to happen,” one Rams veteran said Saturday night, “but I’d expect some major changes around here in the next few months.”
On Thursday afternoon, as he looked ahead to Saturday’s showdown with the Niners, McVay conceded that the 2019 season had been a challenging one.
“When you prepare as hard as we do and put it on the line for three hours every week, every time you don’t come away with a win, it makes you sick,” he’d said as we stood outside one of the team’s temporary trailers at Cal Lutheran University. “Most people, when they experience that, are afraid to have that feeling again — but you can’t fear failure. You have to fight through that and charge ahead and put it on the line the next week, over and over again.
“This year, it’s been good for me. As sickening as it is, it’s given me a new perspective and appreciation for what’s important and who our core is. I’ve grown as a leader, because of the scars.
“And whatever happens on Saturday, I promise you this — I’m coming out swinging. We’re gonna let our nuts hang and see what happens.”
What happened in Santa Clara was that the Rams were ready to rock, and Goff showed poise and precision in executing McVay’s top-shelf gameplan, and the defending conference champions came very, very close to extending their season, if only for a little while.
Instead, they fell just short, gifting Warner a touchdown on Goff’s ghastly gaffe and failing to stop a pair of third-and-16 passes, and they left their young coach gutted and infuriated and, yes, feeling like he wanted to vomit.
“It all makes me sick,” McVay said.
Sicker than he felt after losing the Super Bowl last February?
“It might be worse,” he said. “At least, right now, it feels that way. It’s hard to say. Every single loss, you feel like you lose a piece of your soul.”
A few minutes later, McVay’s quarterback offered a very similar outlook on Saturday’s defeat, and on a season of searing disappointment.
“Yeah, it’s very sickening,” Goff said. “It is sickening that we won’t be able to continue our season next week. Now it’s, how do you regroup? How do you get better? How do you make it so that we don’t have this feeling again?”
In McVay’s case, the answer will likely be complicated — but the motivation that fuels it is as basic as it comes.
A few minutes after boarding one of the team buses, as it pulled out of Levi’s and headed into the gloomiest night of a wrenching campaign, McVay sent me one last thought via text message: I promise this will only serve to drive an absolute maniac in me to be better.
Rest assured, it won’t be subtle.
December 22, 2019 at 9:48 am #109619wvParticipantMcVay: “And whatever happens… We’re gonna let our nuts hang and see what happens.”
==================I think that should be the title of any 2020 Rams Program.
I think General Patton said somethin like that. Or maybe it was Cleopatra. Or Chuck Norris. I dunno.
PS — notice how the tone of the players and coach is that the season is already OVER. Good luck getting up for the Cardinals.
w
vDecember 23, 2019 at 10:48 am #109667znModeratorWhat went wrong for Rams in 2019? The most significant shortcomings
Lindsey Thiry
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — The Los Angeles Rams did not anticipate that their season would be cut short without a playoff appearance.
Not after a dominant run to Super Bowl LIII less than a year ago and not with a roster featuring three players who over the past two seasons have signed record-breaking deals — quarterback Jared Goff, running back Todd Gurley and defensive tackle Aaron Donald. Certainly not after adding cornerback Jalen Ramsey, whom the Rams acquired in October for two first-round picks and a fourth-round pick and who is soon expected to earn a record-breaking deal himself.
But, after winning consecutive division titles, the reigning NFC champions will finish third in the NFC West, becoming the fifth team in the past 10 seasons to miss the playoffs the season after reaching the Super Bowl.
“It’s all been disappointing,” Rams coach Sean McVay said Sunday about last season’s 13-3 loss to the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl and missing the playoffs this season. “They both hurt a lot.”
The Rams will play a regular-season finale against the Arizona Cardinals at home on Sunday before entering the longest offseason in McVay’s three seasons.
If there’s any silver lining, it’s that a win Sunday will allow the Rams to finish 9-7, earning them their third consecutive winning season for the first time since 1999-2001.
“It was just a bad year for us,” Donald said. “We have to bounce back next year.”
So with 2019 essentially in the books, here’s a look at what went wrong:
Coaching
There’s no question McVay experienced his greatest challenge in his third season. After turning a mediocre organization into a two-time division winner, McVay was forced to learn how to navigate a roller-coaster season.
McVay proved himself as a motivator through the ups and downs, evident by bounce-back performances after lackluster losses to the Steelers, Ravens and Cowboys. However, the 33-year-old McVay was unable discover the key to getting his team to consistently perform.
“I think there’s been instances in all three phases where there’s been some really positive things and then there’s been some other instances where I don’t think we’ve played up to our capability,” McVay said. “That’s all of us. That’s coaches, players — we’re all in this thing together.”
As the offensive playcaller, McVay often struggled to find and sustain a rhythm. The offense, a juggernaut in 11 personnel (one running back, one tight end and three receivers) and masters of play action last season, never developed an identity.
On defense, Wade Phillips’ unit played dominant at times but also was prone to total meltdowns. The Rams’ defense gave up more than 40 points in three losses.
“We had a lot of ups and down,” Donald said. “When you come out flat some games, you’re going to lose. We had to be more consistent.”
The offensive line
The Rams rolled the dice entering the season with only three experienced linemen after left guard Rodger Saffold departed in free agency and the Rams declined the option on center John Sullivan’s contract.
2020 NFL draft coverage
The impact of their departures can’t be overstated.
A season after the line boasted the top pass block win rate in the league at 74%, this season’s line ranks 23rd, winning their pass block at a rate of 56%, according to ESPN Metrics powered by NFL Next Gen Stats.
Coaches expressed confidence that young players, specifically left guard Joe Noteboom and center Brian Allen, would be ready to step up. Noteboom and Allen, both first-year starters, showed their youth and inexperience, before each was put on injured reserve because of season-ending knee injuries.
However, it wasn’t just Noteboom and Allen who performed below standard.
Left tackle Andrew Whitworth, in his 14th season, offensive guard Austin Blythe and right tackle Rob Havenstein did not consistently perform to the level they did last season.
In addition, when Noteboom, Allen and eventually Havenstein were injured, the Rams had to turn to rookies David Edwards and Bobby Evans, as well as second-year pro Austin Corbett, whom they acquired in a midseason trade from the Cleveland Browns.
The line showed improvement starting in Week 11 but did not have the experience or personnel to allow McVay’s offense to operate smoothly.
Quarterback play
Goff was among the most inconsistent performers of the season. At times, the fourth-year quarterback appeared unstoppable. At other times, Goff did not appear to play the part of a franchise quarterback.
If anything was learned from Goff’s season, it’s that the former No. 1 pick, who signed a four-year extension worth $134 million last September, needs a strong supporting cast — and a sturdy offensive line — to have success.
Through Week 16, Goff completed 62.8% of his passes for 4,319 yards with 19 touchdowns and 16 interceptions. His total QBR of 47.5 ranks him 25th in the league, a season after he posted a total QBR of 63.7, which ranked 10th.
Todd Gurley mystery
Coming off a disappearing act late last season, Gurley’s situation was unsettled going into the season and created a dark cloud over the offense that never lifted.
McVay was asked weekly about Gurley’s situation and he continually denied that Gurley was on a load management program and went so far as to label himself an “idiot” for not getting Gurley more involved.
But there’s more to the Gurley story. McVay is no fool, and Gurley did not show the physical burst that made him a first-round pick and enabled him to perform among the NFL’s best the previous two seasons.
After rushing for more than 1,200 yards in each of the past two seasons, Gurley has rushed for 789 yards and 12 touchdowns in 14 games (inactive Week 6, thigh bruise). He does not have a 100-yard rushing game.
Defensive woes
In Phillips’ third season as defensive coordinator, the Rams’ defense became prone to too many momentary lapses and too many total meltdowns.
“We just didn’t play consistently,” outside linebacker Clay Matthews said. “Our consistency is probably the biggest message or the biggest thing that we would probably need to hit on in order to put us in a better position.”
The momentary lapses were on full display last Saturday, in a 34-31 loss to the San Francisco 49ers, when the 49ers converted twice on third-and-16 to march down the field and kick a winning field goal.
The total meltdowns occurred in embarrassing losses to the Buccaneers, Ravens and Cowboys, when the Rams allowed each opponent to score more than 40 points.
December 23, 2019 at 3:08 pm #109675znModeratorBarnwell on what went wrong and what’s next
Los Angeles Rams (8-7)
1. The offensive line collapsed. When I wrote about the reasons the Rams were likely to decline in 2019, I mentioned the offensive line as my biggest concern with the roster. They were replacing veterans Rodger Saffold and John Sullivan with untested second-year linemen Joe Noteboom and Brian Allen.
For a team whose offensive line had been both extremely effective and remarkably healthy in Sean McVay’s first two seasons, it was an obvious point of weakness. And the line has been a mess, although not necessarily in the ways we might have expected. Noteboom tore his ACL in Week 6. Allen looked like he belonged as a starter before suffering a season-ending MCL injury in Week 10.
More disconcertingly, the expected strength of the line — the tackles — has been a disaster. Right tackle Rob Havenstein, who committed only two penalties last season, committed eight in nine games before suffering his own knee injury. Andrew Whitworth hit the wall at age 38, as the superstar left tackle has clearly lost a step. Whitworth has committed a career-high eight holding penalties, tied for second most in the league behind Denver’s Garett Bolles. The Rams will likely need to replace Whitworth in their lineup next season without the benefit of their first-round pick, which went to the Jags in the Jalen Ramsey deal.
Should the Rams have seen this coming? They should have expected their offensive line to decline in 2019. Counting on Whitworth to stay at a Pro Bowl level this late in his career was always a big ask, given that just four tackles in league history have started anything close to a full age-38 season. I don’t think they could have expected Havenstein to decline.
How to avoid making the same mistake: L.A. isn’t likely to have much cap space in 2020, so it needs to use the remaining draft capital it has to supplement the line.
2. They’ve been hit by injuries. I was concerned about the Rams dealing with more injuries, especially on offense. McVay’s team had the league’s fewest adjusted games lost on offense in 2017 and its second fewest in 2018. For an offense that loved to run the same offensive personnel for more than 90% of the snaps when everyone is healthy, it’s tough to imagine that keeping up into 2019.
In addition to the three offensive linemen I mentioned, Brandin Cooks, Robert Woods, Gerald Everett, Tyler Higbee and Todd Gurley have all missed time with injuries. On defense, the Rams lost safety John Johnson to injured reserve with a shoulder injury and Aqib Talib (before he was traded) with a rib ailment, while Clay Matthews was out for three games after breaking his jaw against the Seahawks. Rookie Taylor Rapp, who took over in the starting lineup for Johnson, appeared to blow the coverage on the third-and-16 conversion that set up San Francisco’s winning field goal on Saturday.
Should the Rams have seen this coming? They might have wanted to believe they were immune to injuries after two extremely healthy seasons under McVay, but decades of evidence suggests that no team can avoid the injury bug. The Rams have built a top-heavy team by trading for stars and sending away draft picks, and it came back to bite them in 2019.
How to avoid making the same mistake: At this point, they have established their team-building philosophy. They’re not about to suddenly trade their stars away. They aren’t going to have great depth, and if their stars aren’t healthy, we’re going to see uneven seasons like 2019 in the years to come.
3. The offense lost its identity. I figured McVay would have an antidote to the 6-1 fronts that the Lions showed and the Bears and Patriots emulated last season in limiting what had been a wildly productive Rams offense. For most of the year, McVay hasn’t. Just about every team the Rams have faced has used those six-man fronts at least part of the time, and it has slowed down the outside zone and killed Jared Goff’s effectiveness on play-action. Goff ranks 31st in the league in passer rating on play-action in 2019.
What has been strange is just how McVay has handled the whole thing. The Rams eventually moved to a heavier dose of toss plays and duo runs to try to defeat teams that were cheating toward the edge, but those haven’t been quite as effective. Early in the year, the Rams were conservative with Gurley and framed that as a coach’s decision. In recent weeks, they’ve focused the passing game around Higbee and begun to keep Gurley on the field for virtually every play, even late into blowouts, with McVay saying he had been an “idiot” to keep Gurley on the sideline earlier in the year.
I would put a larger portion of the blame on Goff, because McVay’s offense is still creating makeable passes. Goff’s expected completion percentage is 66.5%, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. He is instead completing 62.8% of his throws. The only quarterbacks with 200 attempts or more who have a larger negative gap between their completion percentage and expected completion percentage than Goff are rookies Gardner Minshew and Dwayne Haskins.
When the Rams signed Goff to a four-year, $134 million extension in the offseason, expectations rose for the fourth-year passer. Saturday night’s loss to the 49ers, in which Goff mixed drives where he looked unstoppable with a pick-six and a dropped interception on the tying drive late in the fourth quarter, was a reminder of how flawed the former first overall pick still is after four seasons.
Should the Rams have seen this coming? The Lions, Bears and Patriots all used this tactic with varying levels of success at the end of 2018. It would have been naive to imagine opposing defenses wouldn’t emulate them in 2019, although I was also expecting McVay to have more answers early in the season.
How to avoid making the same mistake: McVay needs to come up with new solutions this offseason. The Rams are locked into their offensive core for the foreseeable future, so this won’t be solved by adding weapons around Goff.
4. The unsustainable stuff wasn’t sustainable. In my preseason column, I noted that the Rams had gone 6-1 in games decided by seven points or fewer, which has historically been almost impossible to keep up. The Rams are 2-3 in those same games this season, including a loss to the Seahawks where reliable kicker Greg Zuerlein missed a 44-yard field goal with 15 seconds to go in a 30-29 defeat.
Likewise, the Rams’ defense was incredible at recovering fumbles last season. Wade Phillips’ unit picked up 12 of the 14 fumbles it forced, while the Rams as a whole nabbed a league-best 71% of the fumbles in their games in 2018. There’s no track record of a Phillips defense or a defense managed by anybody recovering fumbles at that sort of rate over multiple seasons. This season, the Rams have recovered 48.6% of the fumbles in their games, with the defense down to an even 40%.
Should the Rams have seen this coming? I know the Rams are readers, so yes.
How to avoid making the same mistake: There’s not much they can do here. With a 16-game schedule, variance is going to swamp fumble recovery rates.
December 23, 2019 at 7:23 pm #109686znModeratorRams reduced to playoff observers after season of setbacks
Associated Press
https://www.yahoo.com/news/rams-reduced-playoff-observers-season-205716528.html
Only five teams in the last 10 years failed to make the playoffs in the season after they reached the Super Bowl.
The Los Angeles Rams (8-7) officially joined that disappointing group Saturday night. Their last-second loss at San Francisco encapsulated so much of what went just wrong enough this season for coach Sean McVay and his star-studded roster.
The Rams were good in 2019, and they could end up as the league’s only team with a winning record to miss the playoffs. But a series of setbacks at inopportune times has left them third in the highly competitive NFC West, the only division with two 11-win teams.
Los Angeles is 5-7 since a 3-0 start to this season, stumbling through blowout losses and heartbreakers alike that have left them just outside the postseason picture.
Because so many of their expected difference makers didn’t get it done this season, they’re already headed into a long offseason with several huge roster questions And with equally huge financial commitments to navigate while they move into their palatial new stadium in Inglewood.
“You put so much into it, and you want to see more success collectively with the group,” McVay said Sunday. “You get to go through a lot of good and some bad this season. I think that’s forced us to learn a lot about ourselves. I know it has for me personally. Really my focus is on finishing this season out the right way. Once we get to that point where the season is finished, there will be a lot of good self-reflection.”
The Rams finish their four-year tenure in the Coliseum on Sunday by hosting the Arizona Cardinals (5-9-1), but the game was rendered irrelevant by their loss to the Niners.
Again, the Rams were good. They led for nearly the entire first half, their defense held San Francisco to 334 yards, and they made two gritty scoring drives in the second half.
And again, the Rams weren’t good enough.
They blew that first-half lead by giving up two touchdowns right before halftime, including an interception returned for a 46-yard score. The defense gave up 60 of its 334 yards in the final 2 ½ minutes on a drive to the Niners’ game-winning field goal.
The defense was more consistent than the offense in Santa Clara, just as it has been all season. But the defense also flopped at a few key points, making glaring errors that led to key scores by the Niners. The two third-and-16 conversions on San Francisco’s final drive will ring the loudest, but the Rams’ season-long ability to limit big plays evaporated down the stretch.
The loss still fresh in his mind, McVay cited “the consistency” as the Rams’ biggest flaw.
“I think there’s been instances in all three phases where there’s been some really positive things and then there’s been some other instances where I don’t think we’ve played up to our capability.”
WHAT’S WORKING
The Rams are still ninth in the NFL against the pass, and they leaped up to third in the league with 49 sacks after dropping Jimmy Garoppolo six times. That just makes those third-and-16 mistakes even more painful. But it’s clear the Rams have the ingredients for a stellar pass defense if they can keep most of those players around — which won’t be easy with Dante Fowler, Cory Littleton and Jalen Ramsey among those possibly in line for huge raises.
WHAT NEEDS HELP
Todd Gurley and McVay’s rushing game had another dismal evening in Santa Clara. The Rams have the NFL’s 24th-ranked rushing offense (94 yards per game) after managing 78 yards on the ground. Los Angeles was third in the league with 139 yards per game last season, and its yards per attempt is also down from 4.9 to 3.8. The problems are numerous, and McVay must solve them to avoid wasting another year of his wealthy running back’s career.
STOCK UP
Tight end Tyler Higbee’s late-season emergence as a receiver continued with his fourth consecutive 100-yard performance. That ties the franchise record for 100-yard receiving games in a tight end’s entire career, and Higbee did it all in a row.
STOCK DOWN
It’s difficult for McVay to sugarcoat Jared Goff’s inconsistencies after a game that showcased both his enormous talent and his capacity for game-changing mistakes. Goff went 27 of 46, making pinpoint throws and egregious errors in baffling succession. Goff is tied for 19th in the league in touchdown passes (19), but fourth in interceptions (16).
INJURED
Rookie running back Darrell Henderson is done for the season due to a high sprain of his right ankle. Ramsey played through pain in a strained knee ligament Saturday, but the Rams haven’t decided whether he will play in the finale.
KEY NUMBER
9-7 — That’s what the Rams’ record would be with a season-ending win over Arizona. This franchise hasn’t had three straight winning seasons since 1999-2001 in St. Louis. “You want to have those temporary milestones,” McVay said. “What we can accomplish this week is to try to establish a winning record based on where we’re at after 15 games. Is it where we wanted to be? I don’t think anybody would have said that before the season. It is where we’re at, and all we can do is handle it the right way.”
WHAT’S NEXT
The Cardinals and the final chapter in this lost year.
December 24, 2019 at 2:52 pm #109707znModeratorPFF: What went wrong for the Los Angeles Rams in 2019?
https://www.pff.com/news/pro-rams-what-went-wrong-2019
Les Snead has built the Los Angeles Rams’ roster with reckless abandon in recent seasons, actively pursuing trades and wielding a generous wallet in contract negotiations at the expense of future flexibility. There is a certain allure to pushing all your chips into the center of the table and aggressively chasing wins right now. That approach to roster building nearly brought a Lombardi Trophy home to Los Angeles in Super Bowl LIII against the New England Patriots. The approach is not nearly as attractive when the losses begin to build, though. After being officially eliminated from the postseason with a Week 16 loss to the San Francisco 49ers, the Rams are finding that out firsthand.
A season ending outside of postseason contention is shining a light on any and all deficiencies that Los Angeles has shown this season, including the fact that…
JARED GOFF IS PAID LIKE AN ELITE QUARTERBACK, BUT HE’S BEEN FAR FROM IT WITH THIS OFFENSIVE LINE
It’s hard to talk about what is at the root of the Rams’ offensive struggles this season and not begin with the offensive line. That unit went from fifth in PFF pass-blocking grade in 2018 to 31st in 2019, ahead of only the makeshift group that protects Ryan Fitzpatrick in Miami. Every quarterback is affected by pressure. Some are affected more than others, and Goff can safely consider himself part of that “some.”
Throwing out his disastrous 2016 rookie season, Goff ranks sixth in PFF overall grade from a clean pocket (92.7) since 2017. Over that same stretch, his 45.9 grade under pressure ranks 20th. That is the second-highest rank difference of any quarterback in the sample, trailing only Matthew Stafford (fourth from clean pocket and 22nd when under pressure). The traditional numbers under pressure are even uglier. Goff’s completion rate on those throws of just 42.4% ranks 30th among 32 qualifiers. Those aren’t the types of numbers that you’re hoping for from your $134 million man at quarterback.
When Goff has time to stand tall and let it rip without defenders around his feet, it’s not hard to see why the Rams were willing to make him one of the highest-paid quarterbacks in the NFL. He’ll have some lapses, but he’ll also make some of the best throws that you’ll see at the NFL level in those situations, which was the case for much of last year. Not only was he getting clean pockets, but he was getting extended clean pockets. That extra time was crucial for the brand of passing offense that Sean McVay and the Rams want to run.
In 2018, 66% of Goff’s dropbacks lasted 2.5 seconds or longer, the highest rate of any quarterback in the league. The Rams were able to hold up in protection for Goff and let the crossing and long-developing routes that they like to utilize, particularly off play action, develop. This season, that number is down to 54% (16th among quarterbacks). The poor pass protection up front has sped up Goff and hurt what the Rams did so well on offense a season ago.
It’s no coincidence that his career season in 2018 came when the Rams’ offensive line was a top-five pass-blocking unit. The Rams have paid Goff like one of the top quarterbacks in the league, and in order for that to be a reality right now, the Rams simply have to be better up front. Goff has not proven that he can overcome adverse conditions like other elite quarterbacks around the league (*cough* Russell Wilson *cough*). Since he’s who the Rams have hitched their wagons to, they’ll either have to work this offseason to ensure the conditions are closer to what he saw in 2018 or hope for improvement in Year 5. Either way, it’s not an ideal start for the Rams’ nine-figure investment.
THE RAMS ARE PAYING BIG-TIME MONEY AT SUBOPTIMAL POSITIONS
It’s a shame that the running back position isn’t more valuable in the NFL. The players at the position are some of the most exciting and dynamic players in the game, and they take perhaps the most physical punishment of any position. The truth is that the skillset is largely replaceable, though, and their primary task – running the football – is driven by a host of other factors that are more important than the talent level of the running backs themselves, primarily game situation and run blocking.
The most valuable aspect of a running back’s game is the ability to make an impact in the passing game. Todd Gurley was outstanding in that regard in 2017, posting a receiving grade of 91.1 and 12.3 yards per reception (highest of any running back in the last three seasons with 50 or more receptions).
Since then, with the injury issues that he has dealt with, Gurley’s role as a receiver has taken a massive hit to the point that he has the lowest receiving grade of any running back in the NFL this season (32.4). Gurley is averaging just 0.51 receiving yards per route run (fourth-worst among running backs) and has dropped six passes (tied for second-most at the position). He has actually been pretty strong as a runner this season, but his complete lack of impact in the passing game makes his contract an albatross for the Rams moving forward.
To an extent, the same argument can be made for Aaron Donald‘s contract. It’s hard to fault the Rams’ for locking up Donald long-term. The guy is an absolute monster and has been the best player in the NFL, regardless of position, for several seasons now. His 268 pressures since the start of the 2017 season are 44 more than the next closest defender (Cameron Jordan) and 70 more than the next-closest interior defender (Fletcher Cox). He is a force that can-not be stopped.
He also wasn’t even the most valuable non-QB in his own division over the past three years heading into the 2019 season, because he doesn’t directly impact the most important aspect of defense: coverage.
It’s great to have great players, and Donald is undeniably great, just as Gurley was great before being slowed by injuries. He makes the Rams’ defense significantly better by commanding (and beating) double teams at a high rate. As great as it is to have players like Donald, this season for the Rams goes to show – just as the Chicago Bears’ and Khalil Mack’s season does – that elite pass-rushers just aren’t going to move the needle if their offense and passing game can’t get the job done on the other side of the football.
THREE FIRST-ROUND PICKS FOR TWO PLAYERS WITH CAREER-WORST SEASONS IN 2019
The Rams have been no stranger to trading draft picks for proven NFL commodities, shipping multiple first-rounders out for Brandin Cooks and Jalen Ramsey in recent seasons while also working smaller deals for Aqib Talib, Marcus Peters, Dante Fowler Jr., etc. Focusing on the Cooks and Ramsey trades, three first-rounders in that short of a span is a lot of draft capital to give up for a non-quarterback, especially given the deficiencies we’ve seen from Goff that were touched on earlier. Both Cooks and Ramsey looked to be immediate high-impact players at high-impact positions, though.
Including last season with the Rams, Cooks earned a passer rating of 112.2 on his targets from 2014 to 2018, ranking fourth among wide receivers with 400 or more targets in that time frame. He was one of the premier field-stretchers in the NFL with speed to burn, and he had the best season of his career with Goff in 2018. He was one of the top-25 wide receivers in terms of PFF receiving grade in the NFL. Early returns were good.
2019 has been a different story for Cooks. He has posted career-lows in PFF overall grade, receiving yards per route run, passer rating when targeted, and nearly every receiving metric in the book. Cooks, along with the Rams’ offense as a whole, has failed to be impactful.
Meanwhile, their midseason acquisition –Ramsey – had been one of the top shutdown cornerbacks in the NFL since entering the league in 2016. From 2016 to 2018, Ramsey’s coverage grade of 90.4 ranked sixth among cornerbacks over that period, and he also ranked in the top six in completion rate allowed (52.9%) and passer rating allowed (71.6) among cornerbacks with 150 or more targets.
Like Cooks, the success of prior seasons for Ramsey didn’t carry over to this season. He has recorded career-lows in 2019 in PFF grade, completion percentage allowed, and passer rating allowed. His results with the Rams were better than his early-season results with the Jaguars, but Ramsey has still been outperformed by the man he replaced, Marcus Peters (for a considerably larger draft pick investment).
Both Peters and Ramsey began playing with their new teams in Week 7, and since that point, Peters has the fourth-highest coverage grade among cornerbacks while Ramsey sits at 26th. On the season as a whole, their ranks are fourth and 40th, respectively. When you trade two first-round draft picks for a player, you expect that to result in an immediate upgrade, and at least to this point, that hasn’t been the case for the Rams.
WHAT OPTIONS DO THE RAMS HAVE MOVING FORWARD?
The lack of early return from the Ramsey trade is part of the larger issue that has made this season for the Rams so disappointing. The aggressiveness they showed in roster building demands immediate results, and those results didn’t come in 2019. Now, the Rams are limited in the ways that they can improve on this 8-7 team thanks to limited cap room (including an impending massive contract that they will owe to Ramsey) to go along with a barren stock of high draft selections.
They made their bed with the guys on the roster, and now they must lie in it. The talent is there for a Super Bowl run – we saw it less than a year ago – but the Rams have put themselves in a situation where they can no longer go big-game hunting with cap space or draft capital to improve the roster. They’re in a situation where they’re relying on improvement from their investments like Goff, Gurley, Cooks, Ramsey, and Rob Havenstein to consistently perform at the level they’ve shown they were capable of in the past. If that doesn’t happen, things aren’t going to get any better for the Rams in 2020, and there isn’t a whole lot of light at the end of the tunnel.
December 24, 2019 at 4:31 pm #109709AgamemnonParticipantDecember 24, 2019 at 4:42 pm #109710wvParticipant“…Goff ranks sixth in PFF overall grade from a clean pocket (92.7) since 2017. Over that same stretch, his 45.9 grade under pressure ranks 20th. That is the second-highest rank difference of any quarterback in the sample…”
===================One of the problems with stats like that is Not all Pressure is Equal. The stat treats all ‘pressure’ equally. (I wonder what qualifies as ‘pressure’ btw)
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