VB: Donald’s dominance, Goff’s struggles, & other takeaways from Rams-Browns

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  • #105563
    Avatar photozn
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    Aaron Donald’s dominance, theories on Jared Goff’s struggles and other takeaways from Rams-Browns

    Vincent Bonsignore

    https://theathletic.com/1234880/2019/09/23/aaron-donalds-dominance-theories-on-jared-goffs-struggles-and-other-takeaways-from-rams-browns/?=twittered

    CLEVELAND — The Rams’ locker room had mostly emptied by the time Aaron Donald met with the media late Sunday night. A couple hours earlier he notched his first sack of the season in the Rams’ 20-13 win over the Browns, and his impact stretched far beyond dragging Baker Mayfield to the ground.

    Donald essentially took up residence in the Cleveland backfield all night, and when he wasn’t applying pressure on Mayfield he was dictating terms in run defense. It was a vintage Donald performance on a night the Rams desperately needed it.

    But he wasn’t satisfied as he talked about getting things cleaned up and being even better.

    “I feel like I left a lot of plays out there,” Donald, ever the perfectionist, mused.

    “Aaron Donald!” came a booming shout across the locker room, as the unmistakable voice of Rams safety Eric Weddle echoed off the walls.

    The not-so-subtle message was lost on no one. Weddle has seen a bunch of great defensive players over his 13-year career, but Donald is a different animal altogether. And while Donald, the two-time defending NFL Defensive Player of the Year, has a keen self-awareness that detects the need for improvements, everyone else sees a player who continually dominates games.

    “Every play, he can make a difference, and he does for us,” Weddle said. “We build most of our game plan around him and the command he brings from the opponent. The slide of the lines, the protection calls, what they can and can’t do because he is on the field.”

    And as we’ve learned from the first three games of this season, Donald’s impact and the way he has lifted the entire unit — in conjunction with the strong play of Weddle and fellow newcomer Clay Matthews — is the reason the Rams are 3-0 heading into Sunday’s home game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

    That represents a significant change in how the Rams win games, compared to the last two years when they rode their powerful and explosive offense to consecutive division titles and an appearance in last season’s Super Bowl.

    An inexperienced offensive line, coupled with some key injuries and a much different usage of Todd Gurley, has resulted in an uneven start for the offense. Jared Goff, perhaps because of the aforementioned issues, has not played at the Pro Bowl level he displayed the last two years. They are all reasons why the Rams have labored to put together four quarters of consistent offense.

    The Rams have been forced to lean more heavily on their defense. That makes them quite a bit different than what we’ve typically seen, the victory over the Browns being the latest case in point.

    Here are four other observations from Sunday night.

    What’s wrong with Goff?

    It’s an explosive and complex question. The Rams are undefeated after all, and in each of the three wins Goff has delivered in moments that became the difference between winning and losing. By that measure, he is playing winning football even if it doesn’t put up the gaudy stats we are used to seeing from him.

    Nevertheless, his performance certainly looks more labored and forced than in years past. And it’s cause for examination, although I certainly wouldn’t advise anyone to begin panicking.

    Goff’s quarterback rating the last two years was above 100, but it’s sitting at 84 this year and that’s a clear sign of some issues. Part of it is his fault, as he’s been inaccurate on some throws he typically delivers with precision and he has thrown three interceptions (with four touchdowns).

    Goff threw two touchdowns against the Browns, but he also threw two interceptions and lost a fumble. The question is: How much blame should Goff take?

    From my vantage point, it should be shared more than shouldered, given what’s going on around Goff. The offensive line remains a work in progress, and losing Austin Blythe and Tyler Higbee — a tight end who greatly impacts the Rams’ run and pass blocking — only exasperates that issue.

    Meanwhile, between Gurley’s lower usage rate and his general ineffectiveness when utilized, Goff no longer has the same weapon in the backfield. As a result, Goff is being asked to do more while working behind a line that is weaker compared to 2017 and 2018 and operating without an optimal Gurley alongside him.

    His play has reflected that, although it’s important to reiterate Goff has played well enough to lead the offense on critical touchdown drives in the second half of all three wins. When the Rams absolutely need him to deliver, he’s been up to the challenge.

    And against the Browns, a number of those big moments came when he used his legs to buy time and on third downs to keep drives alive.

    “I thought he made some big-time throws,” Rams coach Sean McVay said. “Any time you have to evaluate the quarterback position when you throw it as many times as he did tonight, there’s always going to be some things we can learn from. I thought his ability to escape the rush, make some plays on his own, do things off schedule, was big-time.

    “On the two touchdown drives that we did have, he had some major conversions. Both of those third-down touchdowns that he had — the third-and-6 to Cooper (Kupp) where they bring zero pressure and basically drop and he ends up delivering a great ball. Then the same thing when he hits Cooper on the outbreak in route on the third down and I think it’s 10 or 11 (yards) there. Those are big-time throws that we had to have, and those aren’t real high-percentage downs for offenses.

    “When you have a quarterback playing like that, that’s big.”

    It’s been enough for the Rams to win their first three games, but they need more, obviously. And that is going to have to come from a combination of Goff being more consistent, the offensive line improving and Gurley being more like Gurley again.

    Growing pains for O-line

    Clearly, it wasn’t a great night for Jamil Demby, the second-year lineman who replaced the injured Blythe at right guard. It was a difficult set of circumstances, given it was Demby’s first career start and it came on the road in a raucous environment that required the Rams to go to silent counts.

    That put a lot of added pressure on Demby, who in addition to his blocking duties had to communicate with Goff and then relay the snap order to center Brian Allen. One of Demby’s penalties was caused by him moving early at the line of scrimmage moments after arm-gesturing to Allen to snap the ball.

    That’s not an excuse, obviously, but it was a factor. And overall, save for some improvements in the second half, the offensive line struggled to protect Goff and open holes for Gurley.

    “I think they did OK,” McVay said. “That’s a really good (Cleveland) front. You know, there were some things that, until you go back and look at the tape, it’s hard to say. There were some costly errors that we did make in some crunch-time situations with some communications. I thought overall, they found a way in the second half to get a couple of touchdown drives together. That ended up being the difference in the game.”

    The Rams hope to get Blythe back this Sunday and that certainly will help. But they also need Joe Noteboom, who replaced veteran Rodger Saffold at left guard, to lift his game.

    For now, the line is a work in progress, and with the Rams opening this year with two new starters and with an inexperienced group of backups, their only option appears to be internal improvement.

    McVay’s iffy play-calling

    As often is the case, McVay was critical of himself after Sunday’s game for not doing enough to get his offense going. Some of that is just his humble nature, but he had a point, particularly in regard to the two times he opted to throw the ball in short-yardage situations that stalled drives.

    On one, Goff was sacked and the Rams had to settle for a field goal rather than a touchdown. On the other, Goff forced a ball that was intercepted, giving the Browns one last chance to tie the game late in the fourth quarter.

    In each instance a run seemed more likely, given the score and circumstance and, well, the fact that the Rams had Gurley ready to be activated.

    You just wonder if McVay is a little spooked with the state of the offensive line and the effectiveness of Gurley and whether that has crept into his play-calling a bit.

    “It was tough to get us into a rhythm, and it starts with me,” McVay said. “I keep saying it. I can’t keep sitting up here and saying the same thing. I have to find a way to get it fixed and be better for our football team. Really, there are no excuses other than I just have to do better.”

    Big night for Matthews

    Matthews’ return home to Southern California has turned out to be the boost he (and the Rams) needed. His four sacks through three games already exceeds last season’s total (3.5) with Green Bay.

    Part of that is Rams defensive coordinator Wade Phillips using Matthews in a way that accentuates his pass-rush skills — last year he was asked to drop back in coverage more than at any point in his career — but perhaps Matthews also has more to offer than anticipated.

    He showed as much against the Browns with two sacks on a night when his father, Clay Jr., was inducted into the Browns Ring of Honor. The elder Matthews was honored at halftime, and his son joined part of the ceremony when he ran out of the locker room and onto the stage to hug his dad.

    “It was awesome to see,” Matthews said. “It was a fun event this weekend for the Matthews family. Unfortunately, I was not able to take part in it. But to be out there and see his name along some of Cleveland’s truly all-time greats was remarkable to see. I was able to catch him at the tail end of his speech at halftime. It was cool to see. It looked like he got emotional up there.

    “For me as his son, growing up I figured everybody’s father did the same thing. I would not say he did not do anything special, as he played 19 years. Now, I’m in my 11th year and understand what it takes to play at a top level and dealing with injuries and persevering. To see this city, that gave back to us so much and he gave back to them so much, and to award him by putting him in the Ring of Honor is special.”

    #105564
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    In a twist, the Rams’ defense plays ‘big boy football’ and picks up for the offense

    Vincent Bonsignore

    https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads/2019/09/23014918/GettyImages-1176467938-1024×683.jpg

    CLEVELAND — Eric Weddle would be lying if he claimed he was happy it all came down to an epic defensive stop Sunday night against the Cleveland Browns. The Rams’ veteran safety might be crazy, in the most wonderful of football and athletic ways, but he certainly isn’t stupid or reckless.

    In a perfect world, Weddle would have been chilling on the sideline in the closing minutes, baseball cap pulled tight over his head and basking in a comfortable Rams road win.

    Instead, he was on the field with his defensive teammates, trying to pick up Rams quarterback Jared Goff after the awful interception he threw late in the fourth quarter of a game the Rams led by only seven points. That error gave the Browns one more chance to pull even and send the game to overtime. That looked likely when Baker Mayfield drove the Browns to the Rams’ 4-yard line to set up a first-and-goal situation with 43 seconds remaining.

    Weddle is all about challenges. As are Aaron Donald, John Johnson, Clay Matthews, Cory Littleton, Aqib Talib and everyone else on what is emerging as a very good, very smart and uniquely talented Rams defense.

    But this was pushing it.

    “I’d much rather have the game in hand than living like that,” Weddle said, his mischievous smile wide and affable.

    So, happy? No.

    Maybe appropriate is the best word to describe the situation, given the way the Rams’ defense rose to the challenge all night inside the bedlam of FirstEnergy Stadium. And also, for that matter, through the first three weeks of the season.

    With the Rams’ offense still searching for consistency, the line not yet clicking completely, Goff following two good throws with one curious one, Todd Gurley on a load-management program and Sean McVay not yet satisfied with his play-calling, the Rams increasingly have needed to lean on their defense to survive their first three games.

    That included their 20-13 win on Sunday, in which the Rams had to dig as deep as they could — both in terms of athletic ability and intelligence — to deal with all the pressure presented by Mayfield and a loaded Browns offense.

    And as Rams already have shown this year, this defense is as smart as it is talented.

    “And that’s what makes it so much fun,” Weddle said. “It’s amazing to be able to think on the fly and be able to check and make calls that maybe we didn’t go over (in practice) that we can still do on the fly if I see something. And the guys understand and they trust me to say, ‘Hey, let’s make this check, let’s make this call and we’ll get through it because I think it might be better.’ And that is so much fun.”

    And that’s precisely how Weddle and his defensive brothers held a powerful Browns offense to 270 yards, including only 175 through the air. They battered Mayfield into 18 of 36 passing and allowed star receiver Odell Beckham Jr. just six catches for 56 yards.

    Aaron Donald recorded his first sack of the season while tormenting Mayfield and the Browns all game long, practically taking up residence in the Browns’ backfield. Matthews had two sacks, which was particularly special given that his father, Clay Jr., was inducted into the Browns’ Ring of Honor on Sunday.

    Most important, they took the burden off Goff and the offense in the best way possible, by allowing just three points off three Rams turnovers.

    “You can’t say enough about the defense,” McVay said.

    “We were executing like a mug, baby!” Talib said. “We had a great game plan. And we were out there executing that thing.”

    Never more so than when Mayfield and the Browns inched close to the Rams’ end zone and set up a very simple mathematical equation with 43 seconds remaining. The Browns had four plays to pick up four yards. The Rams’ defense needed to make four stops.

    The clarity of it all was something to behold.

    It’s a point Weddle echoed in the huddle.

    “We got four shots to do this,” is what he remembers telling his teammates. “So let’s just worry about this play. Don’t worry about the next play. Let’s win the down in front of us and move on to the next.”

    “Big boy football,” is how outside linebacker Dante Fowler put it. “It’s time to be stout. It’s time to bow up. The game was on us and we were fine with that.”

    Or as Johnson explained: “Four stops. One at a time. Boom. Boom. Boom. Boom. Let’s get off the field and go home.”

    There was no anger over the situation the offense created for them. No worry or concern or a focus on anything other than the immediate play.

    “We don’t make excuses,” Weddle said. “We don’t worry about what had happened to that point. We just gotta nut up, play our game and play through the down. We move on, instantly.”

    With Donald, Fowler and Matthews creating push up front to force Mayfield off his spot, Mayfield threw errantly on first, second and third downs. That set up fourth and goal with 33 seconds left.

    “One play!” Johnson said. “One play. You can’t survive for one play? You shouldn’t be in this league.”

    Johnson had been oh-so-close to a couple interceptions throughout the game, which is why it seemed appropriate that he dove in the end zone to come up with the game-deciding pick on fourth down.

    “I just kept telling him don’t worry, it’s all good, you’re gonna get another chance at one,” Weddle said Johnson. “And man, we needed that right there. But I didn’t even know he got it. I just turned and I saw him wrestling with it on the ground and I was like, ‘Oh my God, what happened?’ So it was epic that it came down to the secondary.”

    And the defense as a whole, really.

    At some point, you figure the Rams’ offense will join the party for four full quarters. For various reasons, that has yet to happen. In past years that would have been a problem. Maybe somewhere down the line it will cost the Rams a win.

    Three games into the season, though, the Rams’ defense has made sure that hasn’t happened

    #105577
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    if goff finishes the season outside the top 12 in passer rating, i will be disappointed.

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 1 month ago by Avatar photoInvaderRam.
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