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December 7, 2014 at 5:06 pm #13289wvParticipant
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Rapid reaction: St. Louis RamsBy Nick Wagoner
http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/14390/rapid-reaction-st-louis-rams-25
LANDOVER, Md. — A few thoughts on the St. Louis Rams’ 24-0 victory over the Washington Redskins at FedEx Field:
What it means: For the second consecutive week, the Rams proved that they are capable of dominating an opponent that isn’t at their level as they posted back-to-back shutouts for the first time since they were the Cleveland Rams in 1945. During a nine-game stretch in which they faced nothing but winning teams, the Rams were able to pull off an upset here and there. Now that they are out of that string, they are proving that with a lighter slate, they’d be right in the mix for the playoffs. And for the first time this season, the Rams were able to win consecutive games as they improved to 6-7 this season. It’s hard not to imagine what this team could be doing if it had Sam Bradford at quarterback all season or if it played in a weaker division such as the NFC South. Such as it is, the Rams are not a team that playoff contenders Arizona and Seattle will be happy to see during the season’s final three weeks.
Stock watch: Down — Kicker Greg Zuerlein. Zuerlein has had some shaky moments in 2014 after missing only two kicks all of last year, but never has he had a meltdown similar to what occurred in the first half against the Redskins. Zuerlein pushed an extra-point attempt wide right after the Rams’ first touchdown and followed up by missing chip-shot field goals from 28 and 38 yards. All of those misses went wide right. He did rebound to make a 34-yard field goal and an extra point, but even those kicks moved right off his foot. With only three games to play, it’s hard to fathom the Rams should be looking for a kicker. With a short week coming up before Thursday’s game against the Cardinals, it might be difficult to do that. But they should at least take a look to see what’s out there.
Dominant defense: It would be hard to find a defense playing better than the Rams over the past seven or so weeks. After Sunday’s shutout, they haven’t been scored on since the fourth quarter of the loss to San Diego three weeks ago. Washington didn’t run a single play inside the Rams’ 20. Washington running back Alfred Morris finished with 8 yards on six carries and the Rams pressured quarterback Colt McCoy into two interceptions while sacking him six times. They added a seventh when Robert Griffin III replaced McCoy late in the fourth quarter.
Game ball: WR/RB/PR Tavon Austin. Austin appears to finally be gaining some traction as the Rams continue to find ways to get him the ball in space. He finally broke through with a 78-yard punt return in the third quarter. He also had punt returns of 37 and 28 yards and finished with 46 yards on five carries and 14 yards on two catches. During the past few weeks, Austin has finally looked decisive and quick and he’s starting to pay dividends.
What’s next: The Rams return home on a short week to host the Arizona Cardinals on Thursday night with a chance to get their record to .500 for the first time since they were 1-1.
=====================December 7, 2014 at 5:44 pm #13294znModeratorRams romp to another shutout win
• BY JIM THOMASLANDOVER, Md. • For those keeping score, it’s now 76-0 Rams in the last two Sundays. They have scored back-to-back victories for the first time since Games 15 and 16 of last season after Sunday’s 24-0 blanking of Washington at FedEx Field.
A victory this Thursday night at home against Arizona will put them at a place rarely seen this late in the season for the Rams — .500.
After a first half in which the Rams seemed to take a step backward for every step forward, they dominated Washington in the second half with aggressive defense, some Jared Cook, and lots of excitement from Tavon Austin.
Cook scored two touchdowns, including one in the second half. Austin had a 78-yard punt return to seal the deal in third quarter. The Rams are now 6-7; Washington falls to 3-10.
The St. Louis defense registered back-to-back shutouts for the first time since they were the Cleveland Rams in 1945. For the second game in a row and the third time in four games, the opposing offense did not reach the red zone.
The Rams had all kinds of chances to bury Washington in the first half. But penalties, sacks and a major case of the yips by place-kicker Greg Zuerlein left them with only a 6-0 lead at the intermission.
Zuerlein missed the first extra point of his NFL career after a 39-yard touchdown pass from Shaun Hill to tight end Cook early in the second quarter. Zuerlein had made all 91 of his career extra points before that one went wide right.
OK, chalk that up as a fluke, right? Well, Zuerlein then missed two field goals before the half was out. He was wide right on a 28-yard field goal attempt with 5:32 to go in the first half. Until then, Zuerlein had been 16-for-16 on attempts of less than 30 yards in his three-year pro career.
And as time expired in the second quarter, Zuerlein missed from 38 yards. Again, it was wide right. It was only his fourth miss in the 30-39 range in his career. So instead of having a 13-0 lead at the half, the Rams had only the six points from the Cook reception.
After the Rams won the coin toss but deferred, Washington drove to the St. Louis 32 on its opening possession. But free safety Rodney McLeod ended that threat with his second interception of the season, coming on an overthrown pass from Colt McCoy intended for Washington wide receiver Ryan Grant.
The Rams then drove to the Washington 22, but an illegal hands to face penalty against center Scott Wells and an offensive pass interference penalty on fullback Cory Harkey on back-to-back plays pushed the ball back to the 42. The Rams had to punt.
In the second quarter, a 37-yard punt return for Austin, his second-longest return of the season at that point, went for naught on Zuerlein’s first missed field goal. The Rams had a first-and-goal from the 6, but back-to-back sacks forced them to kick a field goal. Or make that try a field goal.
On the Rams’ next possession, a 41-yard completion from a scrambling Hill to Kenny Britt gave St. Louis a first down at the Washington 38. But a second sack by Ryan Kerrigan forced the Rams to punt.
A 28-yard punt return by Austin gave the Rams possession at the Washington 47 on their next series. But that led to Zuerlein’s second miss at the end of the half.
But the Rams got going in the third quarter. After taking the kickoff to start the third quarter, they finally got a field goal from Zuerlein, who squeezed in a 34-yarder to make it 9-0 Rams after a drive that lasted nearly 7½ minutes.
After what looked like a 3-and-out by the Rams’ defense, Washington tried a fake punt on 4th-and-5 from its own 33. But punter Tress Way was stopped after only a two-yard gain, and the Rams took over at the Washington 35 with 6:07 left in the third quarter.
After a holding penalty on Harkey set the Rams back 10 yards, a 36-yard catch-and-run by Stedman Bailey on third-and-12 gave them a first down at the Washington 1. On the next play, Hill connected with Cook in the back of the end zone for Cook’s second TD of the day.
Instead of having Zuerlein kick the extra point, holder Johnny Hekker took the snap, raised up and threw a 2-point conversion pass to Harkey to give St. Louis a 17-0 lead.
Hekker is now six for seven as a passer in his career with two touchdowns.
Then Austin, who has flirted with a punt return TD on several occasions this season, put the capper on the day with a 78-yard return for a score with 1:36 left in the third quarter. This time, Zuerlein kicked the extra point and the Rams were up 24-0.
Many Washington fans headed for the exit after that score, and many of those who stayed started chanting for now backup quarterback Robert Griffin III to come off the bench.
RGIII did get in on the final possession of the day for Washington, which ended with an incomplete pass by Griffin.
BURWELL TRIBUTE
There was a seat set aside for late Post-Dispatch columnist Bryan Burwell in the press box Sunday at FedEx Field, with a vase of flowers and a photo placard that read: The Washington Redskins honor the life, work, and spirit of Bryan Burwell.
Several media members stopped by to look at the tribute, say a prayer, and take a photo. There will be a moment of silence in honor of Burwell prior to kickoff.
December 7, 2014 at 6:15 pm #13305wvParticipantRams pitch second straight shutout; RGIII enters late
By Chris Wesseling
Around the NFL Writer
Published: Dec. 7, 2014 at 04:12 p.m.
Updated: Dec. 7, 2014 at 05:58 p.m.http://www.chatsports.com/nfl/a/Rams-pitch-second-straight-shutout-RGIII-enters-late-1-10833036
It took a late-game Colt McCoy neck strain for Robert Griffin III to get back on the field for the Washington Redskins in Sunday’s 24-0 loss to the St. Louis Rams.
With the game no longer in doubt and McCoy struggling mightily to move the offense, Griffin came on for five fruitless plays over the final two minutes.
It will be interesting to see if coach Jay Gruden considers yet another quarterback change after watching McCoy’s game film. McCoy clearly was in pain and in a hurry to get to a hospital for further evaluation, according to ESPN’s John Keim.
Here’s what else we learned on Sunday:
1. The Around The NFL Podcast has dubbed the Rams the best 5-7 team in NFL history. Now they are the best 6-7 team, thanks to a swarming defense that is first in the NFL in takeaways and second in sacks over the past six weeks. They dominated this game, recording two interceptions, seven sacks and 11 quarterback hits en route to the franchise’s first back-to-back shutouts since the 1945 Cleveland Rams. This roster is a franchise quarterback away from contending for the NFC West in 2015.
2. Colt McCoy is who we thought he was. He has struggled out of the gate in every game he has started this season. Redskins fans actually started an “RGIII” chant after Tavon Austin’s 78-yard punt-return touchdown staked the Rams to a 24-0 lead late in the third quarter. We have been saying for three weeks that Jay Gruden should be playing Kirk Cousins, but none of the quarterback options is particularly appetizing. That doesn’t speak well of Gruden, who was brought in to fix the offense.
3. Ryan Kerrigan might not get the recognition because he plays on a miserable team, but he’s enjoying a Pro Bowl-caliber season. He already has a career-high 11.5 sacks and spent the afternoon putting a clownsuit on Rams right tackle Joseph Barksdale. Kerrigan is the lone bright spot on a defense that has become known for blown coverages.
4. Offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer is finally getting creative with his use of Tavon Austin. Although Austin has been a non-factor as a wide receiver, he piled up a season-high 46 rushing yards on five carries Sunday, putting his season total at 341.
[www.nfl.com]
December 7, 2014 at 6:55 pm #13318znModeratorRedskins hit bottom with embarrassing shutout loss to Rams
By Tom Schad – The Washington Times
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/dec/7/washington-redskins-shut-out-st-louis-rams-embarra/
All season, rock bottom has eluded the Washington Redskins. So all season, they have continued to sink, lower and lower, in an apparent effort to find it.
At a chilly, half-empty FedEx Field on Sunday afternoon, they appeared to come close. There was a failed fake punt and a punt returned for a touchdown. There were St. Louis Rams receivers running wide open toward and through the end zone. There were interceptions, dropped passes, missed blocking assignments, penalties, sacks and chants of “R-G-3! R-G-3!” ringing through the stands in the third quarter.
The Redskins lost again on Sunday, 24-0, the most recent embarrassing performance in a season filled with them. Quarterback Colt McCoy was generally inaccurate in his third start of the season, throwing two interceptions before leaving the game with a neck strain at the two-minute warning. He completed 20 of 32 passes for 199 yards.
Upon his exit, the chanting fans got their wish. Robert Griffin III, the former face of the franchise who was benched by coach Jay Gruden last month, took the field and completed three passes. On fourth down, he overthrew tight end Jordan Reed and trotted back to the sideline, flipping his helmet to an attendant on the way out.
The Redskins fell to 3-10 for the second consecutive season and left the field to a chorus of boos.
Alfred Morris finished with eight carries for six yards. Meanwhile, Shaun Hill threw two touchdown passes for the Rams and Tavon Austin returned a punt 78 yards for a score of his own.
The first half was forgettable at best for both teams. But it began with a promising first drive by the Redskins.
All week, Washington’s coaches had stressed the importance of getting wide receiver Pierre Garcon more involved in the offense, and in the first seven plays, they succeeded. Garcon caught McCoy’s first pass for a 10-yard gain and had three catches for 44 yards in the first seven plays alone.
The drive unraveled when McCoy appeared to overthrow intended receiver Ryan Grant, who didn’t help matters by slipping on the route. Rodney McLeod dove for the interception, stopping Washington’s opening drive just outside the red zone.
And it was all downhill from there.
Facing a Redskins defense without two of its starters — linebacker Keenan Robinson and safety Brandon Meriweather — the Rams moved the ball at will for much of the first half. They got on the board midway through the first quarter, when Hill found tight end Jared Cook running open down the middle of the field from 35 yards out, a play reminiscent of last week’s frequent blown coverages in Indianapolis.
Fortunately for Washington, Rams kicker Greg Zuerlein missed the extra point. For the rest of the first half, in fact, his inaccuracy was all that prevented St. Louis from widening the gap. He missed two field goals, each a chip shot, allowing the Redskins to escape the first 30 minutes with only a 6-0 deficit.
However, there was still one more half to play, 30 more excruciating minutes for those in the half-empty stadium, new lowly depths for the Redskins to discover.
December 7, 2014 at 7:27 pm #13326znModeratorRAMS VS. REDSKINS REPORT CARD – WEEK 14
Jeff Gordon grades the Rams’ performance in their victory over the Redskins.Quarterback: A
Shaun Hill sailed a couple of throws, muffed one center exchange and spit up a sack fumble that could have proven hurtful. But otherwise he took good care of the ball while completing 16 of 22 passes for 213 yards and two TDs. That added up to a sterling 133.2 passer rating and another career-boosting victory as Sam Bradford’s stand-in.Running Backs: B
Washington generally stuffed the run, holding speedy rookie Tre Mason to just 66 yards on 20 carries. But Benny Cunningham got loose while rushing (w0 yards on three carries) and receiving (five catches, 28 yards) to gain some critical first-down conversions. Former starter Zac Stacy was limited to a brief appearance as a short-yardage decoy.Wide Receivers: A
Tavon Austin became the team’s best running threat, gaining 46 yards on five sweeps. Kenny Britt broke open down the field for a 41-yard catch and Stedman Bailey split the Washington secondary for a 26-yard catch-and-run play. This wasn’t the Greatest Show on Turf, but it was more explosiveness than we saw from previous Rams teams.Tight Ends: A
Jared Cook shook off a vicious hit to catch two touchdown passes, one on a 35-yard lightning strike right down the middle of the field. Overall he caught four passes for 61 yards. Lance Kendricks chipped in with an 11-yard catch and Cory Harkey atoned for a costly blocking penalty by catching a two-point conversion pass off a fake extra-point attempt.Offensive Line: C
The unit opened just a few inside seams for the running game and it struggled in protection, allowing four sacks and six QB hits. Hill had to scramble out of trouble way too often. C Scott Wells earned costly penalties for blocking to the face and holding, and he and Hill botched one snap exchange. OT Joe Barksdale had a tough time containing Ryan Kerrigan. And yet he Rams controlled the ball enough to win comfortably.Defensive Line: A+
This front throttled the Washington running game, holding RB Alfred Morris to just 6 yards on eight carries. The line maintained steady pressure on QBs Colt McCoy and Robert Griffin III, earning four of the team’s seven sacks and splitting a fifth. Des Robert Quinn, William Hayes, Chris Long and Eugene Sims were especially disruptive, along with rookie DT Aaron Donald.Linebackers: A
Fans have complained about MLB James Laurinaitis and his inability to make more plays at or behind the line of scrimmage. He had no such problem against Washington, earning one sack and sharing another. He also had one tackle for a loss, two QB hits and a pass defense during his strong showing. OLB Alec Ogletree had a nice downfield pass break-up along with two solo tackles and five assists.Secondary: A
S Rodney McLeod had an early interception and S T.J. McDonald had a late pick to help lead the shutout bid. S Mark Barron was highly visible, too, earning one sack and one tackle for loss on blitzes. The cornerbacks yielded some space to WR Pierre Garcon, who caught nine passes for 95 yards, but they prevented big plays. Washington converted just three of 15 first-down bids on third and fourth down.Special Teams: B-
Greg Zuerlein suffered a first half breakdown, pushing an extra point try and two field goal attempts well wide to the right. That was the first missed extra point of his career and his first missed FG bid from inside of 30 yards. But Tavon Austin had 143 punt return yards, including a 78-yard touchdown spring, and P Johnny Hekker put down three of his four punts inside the Washington 20. Hekker added a two-point conversion pass on a fake extra point kick.Coaching: A
Defensive coordinator Gregg Williams has produced back-to-back shutouts, breaking down Oakland and Washington in consecutive games. This game could have been really ugly—perhaps Raiders ugly—but for some costly Rams penalties, ill-timed protection breakdowns and those head-scratching Zuerlein misses. But 24-0 on the road was impressive enough.December 7, 2014 at 8:18 pm #13341znModeratorRams defense earning all ‘A’s’ right now
By Nick Wagoner
http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/14421/rams-defense-earning-all-as-right-now
EARTH CITY, Mo. — After his team pitched a shutout for the second consecutive week Sunday against the Washington Redskins, St. Louis Rams defensive end Chris Long sounded like a hard man to impress.
The Rams’ 24-0 win against Washington was their second shutout victory in as many weeks, a feat only the 1945 Rams accomplished. For perspective, the Rams played in Cleveland then.
“I don’t think you’ll find anyone in here who is shocked by it,” Long said. “We’re pleased by it but we’re not shocked. There’s still things we could do better. That’s the crazy part. I don’t feel like we even played our best game on defense today.”
OK, well, how about the fact that for the second time in as many weeks and the third time in the past four games, coordinator Gregg Williams’ defense didn’t allow an opponent to run a single play from inside their 20-yard line?
“Now that right there is pretty cool,” Long said. “It doesn’t surprise me that we can shut two people out in a row, that red zone stat is pretty cool. Coach Williams is a doing a great job, the defense is doing a great job playing team defense, buying in.”
Call it buy-in, call it adapting to the scheme, regardless of your chosen platitude, you won’t find a defense in the NFL playing better than the Rams right now. Including Sunday’s domination of the Redskins, the Rams have now gone 128 minutes and 20 seconds without allowing an opponent to score. According to ESPN Stats and Information, the Rams are the first team since the 2009 Dallas Cowboys to have consecutive shutouts and the fifth to do it since 2000.
The Rams limited Washington to 206 yards of total offense, coming up with seven sacks and a pair of interceptions in the process. Redskins running back Alfred Morris finished with 6 yards on eight carries and was hit in the backfield on five of those eight rushing attempts.
That the Rams are playing good defense right now isn’t really breaking news. Since setting the NFL record for futility in sacks over the first six weeks, the Rams have become the pass rushing tour de force many expected them to be entering the season. Since week 7, the Rams now have 34 sacks, that’s the most in the league in that time.
The differences are many, including improved health at every level of the defense but perhaps nothing is more instructive than the Rams’ ability to adapt to the defense and spend more time identifying what the offense is doing rather than worrying about individual jobs from down to down. Nowhere is that more evident than when the Rams blitz.
To the surprise of no one, Williams is the most blitz happy coordinator in the league but now his group is starting to get home. He dialed up 22 blitzes against Washington quarterback Colt McCoy, bringing the heat on exactly half of Washington’s drop backs. The Rams, led by middle linebacker James Laurinaitis, got five of their seven sacks on those blitzes. That matches the five they had when bringing the heat last week.
And it’s not just a function of bringing the blitz but where it’s coming from. The Rams have been making a habit of attacking the “A” gaps (the space between the center and guard) with greater frequency in the past seven weeks, creating pressure up the middle which allows ends like Robert Quinn, Chris Long, Eugene Sims and William Hayes to run free to the quarterback.
“We knew with a guy like Colt McCoy, he’s a smaller guy so we said ‘Hey, you have to attack the A and B [gaps],’” Laurinaitis said. “When you do that you flush him out to your ends. You attack the A gaps, the quarterback will escape out and they escape out to Chris and Will and Eugene and Rob.”
Laurinaitis, who makes all of the defensive checks at the line of scrimmage, has even found a niche. He has three and a half sacks in the past six games after setting a career high of the same number in 2013.
“I love blitzing, I love it,” Laurinaitis said. “The good thing about blitzing is you don’t have enough time to think, you just go. A lot of times you let your instincts kind of take over. We’re working really well right now as a unit of showing one thing, doing another. Showing blitz, playing coverage and just understanding the whole defense. I think that’s our youth growing up in the back end and like I said getting guys healthy. Now we’ve got to continue to do it.”
December 7, 2014 at 8:23 pm #13343znModeratorThe differences are many, including improved health at every level of the defense but perhaps nothing is more instructive than the Rams’ ability to adapt to the defense and spend more time identifying what the offense is doing rather than worrying about individual jobs from down to down.
You know there were hints of that coming from Rams players a few weeks ago. Some were saying, we have had all these extra meetings learning the defense, it is now time to spend that energy to study film and scout opposing players.
If called upon I can even find that stuff on the board.
December 7, 2014 at 8:44 pm #13346znModerator
Bernie Bytes: Rams love that winning feelingBernie Miklasz
LANDOVER, Md. – Some notes on my flip card following the Rams’ 24-0 victory over the Redskins on Sunday afternoon at FedEx Field. And pardon my typos:
* I realize the Rams have pounded a couple of dysfunctional teams over the last two weeks. We’re talking about the Raiders and Redskins here, two of the lesser NFL outfits. I get it; the Rams didn’t trigger back-to-back wins over the Patriots and Packers. But really, I don’t care about that.
The Rams have been stuck in a depressing cycle of losing for such a long time, I’m not going to sit here and shrug like it’s no big deal to see them demolish the Raiders 52-0, and follow up with a 24-0 smothering of the Redskins. Two shutout wins by a combined score of 76-0? The first consecutive shutouts for the franchise since the CLEVELAND Rams did it in 1945? Are you kidding me? That’s just crazy – and in a good way, for a change.
* Coach Jeff Fisher and his players something going now, and it’s almost surreal to enter a happy Rams’ locker room. Smiling, bright-eyed players slinging good-natured insults at each other. You can feel the energy. And the team’s increased confidence is obvious.
“There’s nothing like this feeling right here, after a win, in an NFL locker room,” Rams linebacker James Laurinaitis said. “It’s addicting.”
* The Rams have won two consecutive games for the first time since taking Games No. 14 (New Orleans) and No. 15 (Tampa Bay) on their 2013 schedule. But this has been brewing for a while now. After starting the season 1-4, the Rams are 5-3. And they’ve gone 3-1 since Fisher reinstalled quarterback Shaun Hill in the starting role. Were it not for Hill’s unfortunate interception at the end of the game in San Diego, the Rams would be taking a four-game winning streak into Thursday night’s home game against Arizona. The Rams are playing their best all-around ball since Fisher became coach in 2012.
* The Rams (6-7) can reach .500 by defeating Arizona. And I won’t be a phony here; I thought this team was burnt pie after losing the heartbreaker in San Diego. The painful loss left the Rams dragging with a 4-7 record, and there was nothing to get revved up about. But Fisher and his staff and the players wouldn’t give in to the frustration, and the Rams worked hard, sharpened their focus and bounced back by wiping out the Raiders and the Redskins. This team’s competitiveness should never be questioned. The Rams make too many mistakes, and they’ve given some games away, but it’s never been because of a lack of intensity. Unlike, say, the Redskins … the Rams’ effort is always there.
* Hill was 16 of 22 for 213 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions Sunday. Hill has a 96.0 passer rating in his four starts since the benching of Austin Davis. In the three victories, Hill has completed 67 percent of his passes, averaged a healthy 8.4 yards per attempt, and passed for five touchdowns without an INT. The passer rating in the three wins is 116.0. And Hill’s veteran leadership has become a positive factor. After the Rams made a mess of mistakes in Sunday’s first half – taking a too-small 6-0 lead to the locker room – Hill had a few things to say. He challenged the offense to clean it up and do better.
“He’s taken charge of that offense,” Fisher said. “He was really adamant about their play, and he took charge at halftime with the guys … that’s just his nature. He’s really into it.”
* The Rams out-rushed the Redskins 131 yards to 27. Ballgame. Without a running game Sunday the Redskins had no chance. Quarterback Colt McCoy was stalked and hounded all afternoon, with the Rams diving in fr seven sacks and two interceptions. The Redskins went 3 for 15 in converting third and fourth downs.
* Over the last six games, the Rams are 4-2, and the defense has absolutely led the way. In this disruptive six-game stretch, the Rams’ defense has allowed six touchdowns from scrimmage … and an average of only nine points per game from scrimmage … and has 29 sacks and 15 takeaways … and has given up a mere 3.2 yards per rushing attempt … and has allowed opponents to convert only 29.6 percent of their third downs. The Gregg Williams system: working.
“It’s just everyone getting comfortable and playing faster and not thinking so much,” Laurinaitis said.
“Guys are out there having fun, selling out, making plays, and creating turnovers,” defensive end Robert Quinn said. “Guys are playing lights out right now. And hopefully we can keep going.”
* Wideout Tavon Austin had 203 all-purpose yards for the Rams here Sunday, with 143 coming on punt returns, and that included his 78-yard runback for a TD. Austin was very effective as a runner, with five carries for 46 yards. In other words: this is what Fisher and GM Les Snead envisioned when they traded up to select Austin No. 8 overall in the 2013 draft.
“I think you saw him today, how special he is,” Fisher said.
* Rams tight end Jared Cook was at the center of controversy last week. Cook and four teammates set off a firestorm of debate and indignation with their “Hands Up” gesture in support of Ferguson. The five Rams had plenty of support for choosing to exercise their first amendment rights. But they drew heavy criticism. Cook became the designated spokesman for his teammates, which left him exposed to even more criticism. But as we saw Sunday, the controversy did not distract Cook or any of the Rams. They went back to work to prepare for the Redskins. And they dominated the game, with Cook contributing two touchdown catches in Sunday’s win.
“Once we get on the practice field, it’s all about business,” Cook said. “And that’s what you’ve got to do. No matter what’s going on, you’ve got to handle your business. That’s what you do as a man.”
* The Rams close with games against Arizona (home), the NY Giants (home) and Seattle (away.) The best they can do is finish 9-7 for their first winning season since 2003. If the Rams win two of three, then it’s an 8-8 record … and their first .500 finish since 2006.
December 8, 2014 at 1:08 am #13366znModeratorBernie: Rams finally show how good they can be
Bernie Miklasz
LANDOVER, Md. • This is the football team we’ve been waiting for. Talented, tough and all attitude. Young but maturing. Not quite complete, but progressing in an eye-opening way. Growing in stature and confidence. A team that can strut into an opponent’s stadium and clear the place out by dominating and turning the home crowd against the home team.
These are your St. Louis Rams. They are behind schedule in their arrival to respectability — but hellbent on making up for lost time. A team that has pulverized Oakland and Washington on consecutive Sundays, scoring 76 points and allowing none. Back-to-back wins. Back-to-back shutouts. Back-to-back demonstrations of how good they can be.
After the Rams shooed the Redskins and their fans out of FedEx Field during the course of a 24-0 victory, their locker room had the kind of positive, energetic vibe that’s been missing for too long. A happiness that’s been suppressed by so many depressing, losing seasons.
“There’s nothing like this feeling right here, after a win, in an NFL locker room,” Rams linebacker James Laurinaitis said. “It’s addicting.”
Granted, the Rams manhandled Oakland and Washington during this two-game winning streak. It’s not as if the Rams just got done ripping Green Bay and New England apart. That’s all duly noted. But I’m not fussing over the minor details. When the Rams rise up and drop a 52-0 on Oakland, and come back and wallop Washington 24-0, this catches attention and earns respect.
And this isn’t a two-week deal; the Rams have gone 5-3 since losing four of their first five games. They’re 4-2 in their last six. They’ve delivered a 3-1 record since coach Jeff Fisher reinstalled Shaun Hill as the starting quarterback.
Were it not for Hill’s unfortunate interception at the end of the game in San Diego, the Rams would be toting a four-game winning streak into Thursday night’s home game against 10-3 Arizona.
The Rams are playing their best all-around ball since Fisher became coach in 2012.
And if you say that isn’t true, then here’s my response: two games, two wins, 76-0, and the first consecutive shutouts for the franchise since the CLEVELAND Rams did it in 1945.
What have we learned here?
Let’s rephrase that: What have the Rams learned?
“It’s about finishing games,” said Rams tight end Jared Cook, who caught two touchdown passes Sunday. “I think that’s something we struggled with at first, but now we’re putting it all together and finishing. It’s something that you wish you would have had a few weeks prior, and we’d be in better position. But we’re playing great football right now. Everybody is playing collectively as a team, and it’s a pretty awesome feeling.”
Thursday’s assignment against the Cardinals doesn’t seem as impossible now. Arizona leads the NFC West with a 10-3 record, and the Rams are 6-7. And for a couple of reasons that 6-7 still gives me pause. If the Rams get blown out by the Cardinals, it’s a step back. And a loss would probably mean another losing season.
The best the Rams can do is go 9-7 by winning their final three games – home against Arizona and the NY Giants and the closer on the road at Seattle. And that 9-7 would be the organization’s first winning season since 2003. But if the Rams can win two of three, they’d at least have their first 8-8 mark since 2006. That’s progress.
Winning at Seattle is hard to do, but the Rams can still lose there and finish 8-8 by defeating the Cardinals and Giants at home. No one should treat this team like it’s just about to win a Super Bowl. The Rams’ advances — until the last two outrageous wins — have been modest and methodical. But winning is a new thing for this group, and it’s imperative to build on this instead of falling back again.
“After last week (Oakland), Coach Fisher said ‘Let’s keep this thing going’ and we focused really well during the week,” Laurinaitis said. “And I think he’s going to challenge us to focus really hard the next three days (for Arizona.) We’ve got to just really lock it in, and keep this thing going. There’s definitely momentum right now, but now we just have to keep fighting and keep stacking wins. But I thought it was huge to get two in a row.”
Hill is playing very well. The running game has life. Wideout Tavon Austin is making plays as a runner, receiver and returner and gave the Rams the jolt of 203 all-purpose yards in Sunday’s win. The highlight was his 78-yard punt return for a touchdown.
The Rams’ defense is the No. 1 reason for the revival. Two shutouts in a row? That hasn’t happened in the NFL since the Dallas Cowboys did it in 2009.
If the Rams’ defense continues to disrupt and deny opponents, then the team has a shot to win its final three. Over the last six games, the Rams’ defense has allowed six touchdowns from scrimmage, has 29 sacks and 15 takeaways, and has given up a mere 3.2 yards per rushing attempt. And offenses have converted only 29.6 percent of third downs against the Rams’ D.
Defensive coordinator Gregg Williams is building a beast. His system still works. The players just needed to get acclimated to it.
“It’s just everyone getting comfortable and playing faster and not thinking so much,” Laurinaitis said.
Added defensive end Robert Quinn: “Guys are out there having fun, selling out, making plays, and creating turnovers. Guys are playing lights out right now. And hopefully we can keep going.”
Yes, please keep it going.
It’s fun to watch a winning NFL team.
In St. Louis, we’d kind of forgotten what it’s like.
The Rams aren’t true winners just yet; they’re still 6-7 on the campaign. But a two-game winning streak — marked by the rare achievement of two consecutive shutouts — is an emphatic way to start. In two weeks the Rams have gone from nothing … to 76 to nothing. You could say that’s progress.
December 8, 2014 at 2:16 pm #13403znModeratorA closer look at Greg Zuerlein’s missed kicks
By Nick Wagoner | ESPN.comhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/14449/a-closer-look-at-greg-zuerleins-missed-kicks
WASHINGTON, D.C. — St. Louis Rams kicker Greg Zuerlein has had some rough days in the NFL. There haven’t been many but none worse than what took place in the first half of the team’s 24-0 win against the Washington Redskins on Sunday.
In those first 30 minutes, Zuerlein missed an extra point and field goal attempts of 28 and 38 yards. Entering the game, Zuerlein had never missed an extra point or a field goal attempt inside 30 yards in his nearly three year career in the NFL.
Earlier this season, Zuerlein had a rough day against Kansas City, missing a 38-yard field goal and mis-hitting a kickoff that led to a 99-yard return for a touchdown by the Chiefs Knile Davis.
But something was clearly off Sunday as Zuerlein pushed all of his misses to the right. Even when he course corrected a bit in the second half, his kicks were still moving to the right.
So what, exactly, was the problem? Was it just a case of the yips?
“Yeah, I think so,” coach Jeff Fisher said. “It happens every once in awhile. He had a great week. He spent a lot of time outside on the grass in the weather and outside and he just had something wrong with the mechanics and the swing.”
I didn’t get a chance to catch up with Zuerlein after the game because the visitors locker room divides the offense and defense and I was spending most of my time catching up with defensive players after their second consecutive shutout. By the time I got back to the offensive side, Zuerlein was gone. To be clear, Zuerlein didn’t avoid anything and he never has. He’s always been a standup guy.
So we turned to quarterback Shaun Hill to get his perspective on if there was anything he could offer that might further explain Zuerlein’s struggles.
“The elements probably didn’t look that bad out there but the grass was long and the field was soft, the wind was blowing,” Hill said. “It’s a rough place to kick today out there for him and really a tough place to throw at times, too.”
That might just sound like a team captain doing what he should and sticking up for a teammate but I can actually vouch for Hill’s assessment of the field conditions. Redskins reporter John Keim and I walked on the field after to shoot our game balls video and it was obvious that the field was in horrible shape.
That’s not really an excuse for Zuerlein, who still has to at least make extra points and there’s little doubt that the first miss probably led to some mental block that led to the others. But it’s still worth noting.
For what it’s worth, Fisher expressed confidence in Zuerlein during and after the game.
“I told him we were going to need him and probably need him to win this game for us,” Fisher said. “So forget what happened and just hit it between those two poles that are at the end of the field. You want to hit them between them, you don’t want to hit them outside.”
Zuerlein’s job appears safe for now but if his problems continue Thursday night against Arizona, the Rams will have no choice but to take a closer look.
December 8, 2014 at 3:48 pm #13416DakParticipant“I told him we were going to need him and probably need him to win this game for us,” Fisher said. “So forget what happened and just hit it between those two poles that are at the end of the field. You want to hit them between them, you don’t want to hit them outside.”
Well, you can’t argue with that logic.
December 8, 2014 at 8:48 pm #13456znModeratorRams the team no one wants to play
By BARRY WILNER
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/rams-team-no-one-wants-play-202437292–nfl.html
The end of the NFL season can be like the climax of a horror film. Many postseason contenders look at their December schedule, see an opponent and say: ”Not Them!”
That team to avoid this year is St. Louis.
Sure, the Rams (6-7) have a minuscule chance to still make the playoffs, even though they’d probably run away with the NFC South. Naturally, making the playoffs should still be their goal, despite the long odds.
But the reality is that the Rams are making it very uncomfortable for anyone they line up against. And in two of the next three weeks, they will line up against the Cardinals and Seahawks, the teams vying for the NFC West title – and potentially home-field advantage throughout the conference playoffs.
St. Louis comes off consecutive shutouts. Yes, the Rams blanked Oakland and Washington, and these are not quite the John Madden Raiders or Joe Gibbs Redskins.
But the defense has become, to use a once-familiar adjective for the franchise, fearsome. The previous time the Rams shut out two straight opponents was 1945. Not even their Deacon Jones-led Fearsome Foursome managed that feat.
”1945? We’re about to shut out three!” defensive tackle Michael Brockers said. ”When’s the last time we shut out three?”
Never.
But as Arizona comes calling on Thursday night – that would be banged-up Arizona now without its top running back, Andre Ellington – who’s to say the Rams won’t make history?
”I am really excited for the guys. Back-to-back shutouts are pretty impressive. I’ve been told it hasn’t happened since the ’40s in our organization,” said coach Jeff Fisher, who also should be excited for himself and his staff.
Fisher’s nearly three decades of NFL coaching have been highlighted by several rebuilding projects. He’s in Year 3 with the Rams, and things looked bleak early in the schedule.
Indeed, there were critics who believed Fisher was on the hot seat when St. Louis was 1-4.
The truth is, he hasn’t had his full roster for nearly his entire tenure in St. Loo. Fisher still doesn’t know who will be his quarterback going forward in the league’s best division.
What he does know, and what the rest of the league is recognizing, is that the former defensive back with the great Chicago Bears of the 1980s has a defense to avoid.
”It has a lot to do with the health and familiarity of the guys,” Fisher said after Sunday’s win at Washington. ”Guys are maturing and we are getting a lot of positive plays out of a lot of guys. The secondary is playing well and they are challenging people. When you are getting sacks and takeaways and you aren’t giving away the ball on offense, you have a chance to win a lot of games.”
The Cardinals and Seahawks are very aware of that. They also might shudder when they hear Fisher add: ”I look at this saying, ‘We can play better.’ ”
On defense, that’s difficult to imagine. They had seven sacks among six players against the Redskins, and tend to get pressure from everyone in the rotation, led, of course, by Robert Quinn.
After a horrendous start, with no sacks in his first five games, he has 10 1-2. The fourth-year defensive end, along with fellow DE Chris Long, tackles Brockers and rookie Aaron Donald, and linebacker James Laurinaitis, form the youthful foundation of a formidable unit.
That unit is getting the hang of intense coordinator Gregg Williams’ schemes, making it almost a match for the other strong defenses in the division. It might already be better than injury-damaged San Francisco’s D.
Fisher’s teams always have had standout running games, and he’s searched for the right ball carriers since Steven Jackson left in 2013. It appears they have the answer in big-play rookie Tre Mason.
It all might add up to only a .500 season or worse this year for the Rams. But it makes them Public Enemy No. 1 for the Cardinals and Seahawks, division rivals with big aspirations that Fisher’s ”guys” just might deflate.
December 8, 2014 at 11:46 pm #13466znModeratorTen Takeaways from Sunday’s 24-0 Win Over Redskins
http://www.101sports.com/2014/12/08/ten-takeaways-sundays-24-0-win-redskins/
Randy Karraker
The Rams finally won a second consecutive game on Sunday in Washington, becoming only the fifteenth team since the merger to turn in back-to-back shutouts in a 24-0 whitewash of the Washington Redskins. Now the Rams have a chance to get to .500 on Thursday when they host Arizona, despite numerous setbacks during this 2014 season. With that, 10 takeaways from a winning Sunday in Landover, Maryland…
Gregg WilliamsGregg Williams’ defense has shut out opponents for two weeks straight.
1) On some levels, it’s amazing what the defense has done. When you think about the fact that the Rams set a record for the fewest sacks through five games (with one), it is remarkable that they are now tied for seventh in the NFL with 35 sacks. With 34 sacks in their last eight games, the Rams pace over their last half-season is 68. The 1984 Bears have the all-time record with 72 sacks.
The Rams back-to-back shutouts are also historic, as they became the fifteenth team since the merger to record shutouts in consecutive games. Jeff Fisher’s 2000 Titans turned that trick…as did the two best defenses of the last 45 years, the 1985 Bears and the 2000 Ravens. Notably the two teams to record THREE straight shutouts are the 1970 St. Louis Cardinals and the 1976 Pittsburgh Steelers. This defense appears to have turned the corner toward living up to its hype.
On the turnover front, the Rams have fifteen takeaways in their last seven games, after recording just seven in their first six contests.
2) The quarterback again exhibited strong game management. Shaun Hill once again handled the game exceptionally well. With this defense, the key is to not turn the ball over. Sure enough, Hill was 16-22 for 213 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions. Since re-entering the lineup four games ago, Hill has thrown just two interceptions, not coincidentally in his only loss at San Diego. Hill is showing what a QB that doesn’t throw interceptions can do while the rest of the team lives up to what Jeff Fisher wants. If they run the ball and play defense, it’s just a matter of winning the turnover battle. If the Rams win that, they win the game.
3) The Rams were able to overcome a bad day by the kicker. Whatever happened to Greg Zuerlein as he missed an extra point and two field goals wide right was troubling. The Rams were able to overcome it, and Fisher was able to pass it off and express his confidence in Zuerlein after the game, but you sure wonder what happens when the Rams get into a big game. At this point in his career, he hasn’t had to kick in a game that had major implications for the Rams. Hopefully he’ll be able to work through some of his inconsistency before the Rams reach that point of regularly playing big, meaningful games.
4) Jared Cook is holding on to the ball. After leading NFL tight ends in drops last season with eight, Cook has only three this season. On Sunday, he was targeted five times and caught four passes, including two for touchdowns. Cook is evolving into the weapon the Rams thought they were getting when they gave him a five year, $35 million contract before the 2013 season. Using him down the seam like Hill did for Cook’s first touchdown was the ideal use of the big guy, who leads the team in receptions with 41.
Rams utility man Tavon AustinTavon Austin has three touchdowns in the last four games.
5) They’ve finally figured out how to use Tavon. Finally, in the last three games, the Rams have gotten away from running Austin into the line, between the tackles. It seemed logical to utilize him on the perimeter with jet sweeps and smoke screens, but that didn’t happen much in the first half of the season. His use in the offense appears to be affecting Austin’s confidence as a punt returner, too. From the day he was drafted, Austin has had the ability to be a game changing weapon. But the Rams had some problems figuring out how to deploy him. In the last four games, Austin has three touchdowns and has utilized his speed to set the Rams up in good field position numerous other times.
6) The offensive line still presents protection issues. Hill was sacked four times and was under siege for much of the afternoon. The Rams have allowed 39 sacks this season, and just six teams have allowed more. Certainly, there have been issues with the quarterback hanging onto the ball too long, and not all sacks are the fault of the offensive line.
But against Washington, there were too many instances in which Hill didn’t have time to make a play. Greg Robinson is still learning, sure. But at right tackle, Joe Barksdale appears to have trouble with 3-4 outside linebackers, and Davin Joseph and Scott Wells aren’t as stout as the best linemen in the game. They need to be a little bit more rugged for this offensive line to reach the level of Baltimore, Cincinnati and Philadelphia.
7) The Rams had to have Johnny Hekker throw, and he was great at it. When the Rams signed punter Hekker to a six year contract extension on Friday, the headline of their release read “PUNTERS GET PAID LIKE PEOPLE, TOO-Rams sign NFL’s completion percentage leader to six-year extension.” So of course they had to use him as a passer right away. Hekker’s pass to Cory Harkey for a two point conversion in the third quarter was perfect. He has completed all three of his pass attempts this season (with Sunday’s being on a two point conversion) and has a perfect 158.3 career passer rating. Hekker is a great part of the team, and signing him was a smart move on the part of the franchise.
johnny hekkerHekker is three for three in pass attempts this season.
8) Jeff Fisher has really coached this team up. Fisher hasn’t used being the youngest team in the league as an excuse for its inconsistency, and I don’t think it IS an excuse. That being said, this team is playing much better as the season unfolds. Clearly, they are being coached at a high level. They remind me of the 1986 Buccaneers, who won five of their last six to finish 6-10, then started out 5-0 the next year on their way to the playoffs. Or the 2002 Panthers, who won four of their last five to get to 7-9, then began the next year 5-0, and went 11-5 and to the Super Bowl. That’s the sort of trajectory I see for the Rams down the stretch and next year.
9) The Rams can get to .500 despite a decimated roster. The Rams can get to the .500 mark on Thursday with Arizona in town. This despite losing quarterback Sam Bradford, left tackle Jake Long, and top receiver Brian Quick. If the Rams are ever able to stay healthy, they have a chance be a scary proposition in the NFC West and in the NFC overall in years to come.
10) For fans of the draft, the Rams have messed up your choice. There are five teams in the NFL with just two wins. If the draft were held today, St. Louis would hold, at best, the twelfth selection. And with as hot as the defense is, you kind of figure they’ll have more than the six wins they currently have. The thing to think about is the first .500 season here since 2006, and worry about the draft after this season is over.
December 8, 2014 at 11:58 pm #13467ZooeyModeratorI do believe Schottenheimer is putting Tavon outside more, and that is better for his game. But I also think he is looking better because he has gone against weaker defenses that don’t have discipline. Austin is exactly the kind of player that can maximize damage against an undisciplined defense.
But I still don’t think he will ever amount to much against disciplined defenses. Tavon Austin against a tough defense like the turn of the century Bucs or Ravens would just git kilt. He will be a good regular season player, and disappear in the playoffs. Except, maybe, as a returner.
December 9, 2014 at 2:51 am #13471AgamemnonParticipantDecember 9, 2014 at 6:42 am #13472wvParticipant“..Titans turned that trick…as did the two best defenses of the last 45 years, the 1985 Bears and the 2000 Ravens. Notably the two teams to record THREE straight shutouts are the 1970 St. Louis Cardinals and the 1976 Pittsburgh Steelers. This defense appears to have turned the corner toward living up to its hype….”
The Cardinals
had a great Defense??I dont remember that.
w
vDecember 9, 2014 at 9:45 am #13478ZooeyModerator“..Titans turned that trick…as did the two best defenses of the last 45 years, the 1985 Bears and the 2000 Ravens. Notably the two teams to record THREE straight shutouts are the 1970 St. Louis Cardinals and the 1976 Pittsburgh Steelers. This defense appears to have turned the corner toward living up to its hype….”
The Cardinals
had a great Defense??I dont remember that.
w
vI don’t either. But statistical anomalies happen. And it was a low-scoring era.
I saw on the list of back-to-back shutouts the 1974 49ers, and that caught my eye because my memory is that the 49ers were not a good football team in the 70s. I looked them up, and they finished 6-8 in 1974. That isn’t the 76 Steelers.
But then…neither are the 14 Rams.
December 9, 2014 at 12:48 pm #13485joemadParticipant<div class=”d4p-bbt-quote-title”>wv wrote:</div>
“..Titans turned that trick…as did the two best defenses of the last 45 years, the 1985 Bears and the 2000 Ravens. Notably the two teams to record THREE straight shutouts are the 1970 St. Louis Cardinals and the 1976 Pittsburgh Steelers. This defense appears to have turned the corner toward living up to its hype….”The Cardinals
had a great Defense??I dont remember that.
w
vI don’t either. But statistical anomalies happen. And it was a low-scoring era.
I saw on the list of back-to-back shutouts the 1974 49ers, and that caught my eye because my memory is that the 49ers were not a good football team in the 70s. I looked them up, and they finished 6-8 in 1974. That isn’t the 76 Steelers.
But then…neither are the 14 Rams.
I look up the 74 season…
RAMS pitched 2 shuts that year, vs Saints and Falcons, (not back-to-back)
SF, pitched back-to-back shut outs to Bears and Falcons that year, ironically, SF was shut out the following week 7-0 in Cleveland. 7 points allowed over 3 games is not bad.
SF’s defense was getting old but were decent back then…. also, they needed a QB to replace Brodie…..didn’t happen until Montana got there in 79.
December 9, 2014 at 1:31 pm #13492ZooeyModeratorI look up the 74 season…
RAMS pitched 2 shuts that year, vs Saints and Falcons, (not back-to-back)
SF, pitched back-to-back shut outs to Bears and Falcons that year, ironically, SF was shut out the following week 7-0 in Cleveland. 7 points allowed over 3 games is not bad.
SF’s defense was getting old but were decent back then…. also, they needed a QB to replace Brodie…..didn’t happen until Montana got there in 79.
Yeah, the 9ers were crummy for a long time. The Rams routinely beat them twice a year. The opposite of the 90s.
December 9, 2014 at 2:02 pm #13493joemadParticipantRams defense was great back then, very underrated.
They pitched at least 1 shut out every year from 1973 to 1979.
1973 2 shut outs
1974 2 shut outs
1975 1 shut out
1976 1 shut out
1977 3 shut outs
1978 1 shut out
1979 3 shut outs, the 3rd in the NFC Championship game.they didn’t hold anyone scoreless again until 1985, when they did it twice, to KC and Dallas, unfortunately they got skunked against the Bears in the NFC Championship.
December 9, 2014 at 4:14 pm #13504ZooeyModeratorRams defense was great back then, very underrated.
They pitched at least 1 shut out every year from 1973 to 1979.
1973 2 shut outs
1974 2 shut outs
1975 1 shut out
1976 1 shut out
1977 3 shut outs
1978 1 shut out
1979 3 shut outs, the 3rd in the NFC Championship game.they didn’t hold anyone scoreless again until 1985, when they did it twice, to KC and Dallas, unfortunately they got skunked against the Bears in the NFC Championship.
The Rams had the #1 rated defense of the 1970s. I read that somewhere. It was rated above the Steelers and Cowboys.
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