tweets & reporters & the big articles … Lions game

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  • #148704
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    Fishkiller@FV_Mylia_Lynn
    I really thought we would win this game. If you would’ve told me before the game our D would hold them to 24 points I would’ve thought we won. Even though this was a wonderful surprise to make the playoffs this year this loss still sucks. Happy for the Lions players & fans though

    Tom@TL_LARams
    Red zone offense, clock management, and a slow start from the D. Those would be the things I would look at as being the reasons the Rams lost rather than blaming the refs.

    Thomas Shelby@ramsfan1987
    Defense played a hell of a second half. Unfortunately the offense didn’t capitalize.

    SeattleRams@seattlerams_nfl
    It started with trading and releasing a number it star players.

    Along the way we saw a number of newcomers fill the void left by the departed.

    This TEAM gave us a helluva ride along the way., so it’s hard for me to be upset with how this year ended.

    Jared had every chance to take shots while being interviewed on the field after the game , and once again took the high road.

    Good luck the rest of the way, Lions.

    Andrew Siciliano@AndrewSiciliano
    Sean McVay: “I don’t want to say anything now that gets me in trouble. I don’t want to take away the credit. Hats off to the Lions.”

    SeattleRams@seattlerams_nfl
    Convert in the red zone and the refs are not being used as a crutch.

    Blaine Grisak@bgrisakTST
    Rams 0-for-3 in the red zone
    Lions 3-for-3 in the red zone

    Rams Tapes@RamsTapes
    Puka Nacua broke the NFL record for most receiving yards by a rookie in a single playoff game.

    #148729
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    Michael Silver@MikeSilver
    Much respect to the Rams. Really good plan. Great halftime adjustments by Raheem. Terrific game. Happy for @JaredGoff16. It’s been a journey.

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    4th and 5 from the Lions 44, and the Rams get the conversion on a completion from Stafford to Kupp. Wow

    Ian Rapoport@RapSheet
    #Rams QB Matthew Stafford, in considerable pain it seems all over, is now in the medical tent getting checked out.

    Michael Silver@MikeSilver
    He is one of the toughest QBs of his generation… if there’s any way to stay in, he will

    Albert Breer@AlbertBreer
    Stafford and Nacua are insane.

    #148737
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    Jeff Howe@jeffphowe
    Not only did the Lions just win their first playoff game in 32 years, that was just their second playoff victory since 1957.

    Blaine Grisak@bgrisakTST
    I do think this game shows how much the Rams need a playmaker in the secondary and another pass rusher.

    Defense grew into the game and Morris called a great second half. But 21 first half points was tough to overcome.

    Ross Tucker@RossTuckerNFL
    So much respect for the way these Rams WRs block. Kupp, Nacua, all of them.

    trey wingo@wingoz
    Man it’s fun to watch 2 QBs play well in a post season game. Especially after the disaster in Dallas in the 1st game

    Michael Silver@MikeSilver
    Lions built this from the inside out. That offensive line is the key to everything.

    Torry Holt@AllHands81
    Puka’s playing outstanding football back-to-back BIG plays

    Peter Schrager@PSchrags
    Congratulations, @Lions fans. That was one of my favorite games in recent memory. What a cool deal for Detroit; what an amazing season from the Rams.

    Andrew Siciliano@AndrewSiciliano
    Ronnie Rivers and Davis Allen making huge plays in the 4th quarter of a playoff game…just as we all expected during the preseason in August.

    #148740
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    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Sean McVay said during his postgame press conference that he was not sure whether Matthew Stafford was evaluated for a concussion, then looked to a team spokesperson next to him for clarity and that spokesperson said he was. Stafford later added he hurt his ribs as well.
    #148742
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    Rams Brothers@RamsBrothers
    Season full of over-achieving for the 2023 Los Angeles Rams.

    • Stafford, Kupp and Donald stayed healthy for a majority of the season. Combined, they only missed 6 games (excluding the finale).

    • Offensive line was your biggest question mark in 2022. 2023 brought us Steve Avila and Kevin Dotson. The unit as a whole performed exceedingly well, based on expectations.

    • Defensively, rookies Kobie Turner and Byron Young proved to be viable starters and potential stars. The Rams may lose Raheem Morris, but schematically, they got the most out of econdary that had the most turnover in the league.

    • Special Teams was a dud. But, Ethan Evans will be a starter for the foreseeable future and they loved their long snapper (Alex Ward) before he got hurt. Kicker will be addressed in the draft or via FA.

    FUTURE IS EXTREMELY BRIGHT

    #148743
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    #148746
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    from https://www.nfl.com/news/qb-jared-goff-beating-his-former-team-to-secure-lions-first-playoff-win-in-32-years

    With fans having chanted his name from the moment he hit the field for pregame warmups, part of what Goff would later call “the best home game atmosphere he has ever experienced,” he rewarded them with a fiery start. He hit his first 14 passes and finished the first half 16 for 18 for 194 yards and a touchdown. Goff’s TD throw to a less-than-full-strength Sam LaPorta put the Lions up 21-10….

    Goff’s secret? He took the focus off himself as best he could and focused his energies more broadly. “I just kept going back to what this game was about, and it was about us,” Goff said. “It was not about them. It was not about me. It was not about my history there. It wasn’t about anyone on their team or any coaches. It was about us. It was about the 53 in this locker room, our coaches and this organization getting a playoff win in front of our home crowd.”

    #148748
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    Listen to the whole thing. He does a commerical at one point so just skip over that because there’s more. He has really high praise for Stafford.

    #148749
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    They really loved watching Stafford in this game.

    .

    #148755
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    #148769
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    roberto clemente@rclemente2121
    according to pff, wildcard game:

    when pressured:
    ——————
    stafford – 5/11 for 73 yards, 0 td, 0 int
    goff – 3/8 35 yards, 0 td, 0 int

    when kept clean:
    ——————-
    stafford – 20/25 for 294 yards, 2 td, 0 int
    goff – 19/19 242 yards, 1 td, 0 int

    Josh Dubow@JoshDubowAP
    Rams averaged 7.73 yards per play and didn’t turn the ball over. No team since at least 1949 averaged 7+ yds/play, had no turnovers and lost a playoff game before tonight

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    We watched Aaron Donald kind of age in reverse this year from a hard 2022, and get back a lot of joy with his young teammates. Asked in his postgame interview if he’s committed to carrying that forward into 2024 with this group, he said, “for sure.”

    Field Yates@FieldYates
    Jared Goff when not pressured last night:

    22-of-22, 277 yards, 1 TD

    That’s the most attempts without an incompletion in the playoffs since ESPN began tracking pressures in 2009.

    roberto clemente@rclemente2121
    can’t remember the last time i saw so many top rams offensive skill position players get so pummeled in one game: higbee, kw, puka, and stafford, the guys took some brutal hits, 2 didn’t return.

    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    Some numbers that tell the story of last night’s Rams loss

    – 15 missed tackles
    – Goff was 22-for-22 when not pressured
    – 9 total yards in 10 red zone plays (Stafford was 2-for-7)
    – 0-for-3 in red zone
    – St. Brown had 3rd-down conversions that gained 14, 23 and 30 yards

    #148777
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    Rodrigue: Rams’ hard, beautiful, bittersweet season comes to an end in Detroit

    By Jourdan Rodrigue

    https://theathletic.com/5202807/2024/01/15/los-angeles-rams-playoffs-loss-lions/?source=emp_shared_article

    DETROIT — A stadium that echoed deafeningly from its green strands of turf to its lofty rafters for four quarters finally emptied and all that was left over to fill the air inside was every feeling imaginable.

    Oh, Los Angeles Rams fans. I don’t know what to say to you tonight except I wish so dearly you could feel what I can feel, sitting up under the rafters having watched a city just about dying for the moment it deserves get that very moment. Having just seen a head coach nearly in tears and players with their heads in their hands and a phenom rookie receiver say, yeah nine catches and 181 yards and a touchdown were fine but missing that one catch on third-and-14 will stay with me forever.

    Up here in the quiet of Monday morning, looking out across Ford Field, everything every single person present tonight felt hangs in the air still and it probably always will.

    For the Rams in 2023, that was always kind of the point: Be in every moment. Experience every day, every drill, every lesson. It’s a hard thing to do, and harder still for a head coach who has always been in such a dang hurry to be successful.

    But there Sean McVay was, at the lectern cursing himself internally for his offense’s 0-for-3 stat line in the red zone Sunday night, a 24-23 loss to the Detroit Lions, his voice hoarse and cracking from trying to communicate with his players and coaches in an absolutely (and truly perfectly) hostile environment at Ford Field. McVay, who disappeared so far into his own head in 2022 some close to him wondered whether he could ever re-emerge.

    “I’m so proud of this football team,” he said. “The finality of it is still, it doesn’t totally resonate. But man, did I learn a lot. And I really appreciate this group.

    “They helped me find my way again.”

    Why “perfectly” hostile? I wish you could have heard it — the way these Lions fans met their moment. They booed Matthew Stafford mercilessly, right from the second he ran onto the field and long into the game. They chanted Lions quarterback Jared Goff’s name, not just in support of him but also to needle Stafford, who played 12 seasons there without winning a playoff game before arriving in Los Angeles and promptly winning a Super Bowl.

    “It was a good playoff atmosphere,” Stafford said after the game. He was evaluated for a concussion during the game and also suffered a ribs injury (the severity of which is currently unknown but he did return).

    “It was a playoff game. I’m not surprised that (Lions fans) were excited about cheering for their team. I’m not too worried about anybody’s personal feelings toward me that was sitting in the stands.”

    The fans had skeleton dolls wearing Rams jerseys in the front row of one of the end zones, waving wildly and slamming into the matting around the edges of the field. They got even louder every time they saw Stafford audible into the second of two plays McVay always sends through the headset. They screamed at the officials, so loudly at times that the crew had to stop time to get an announcement to the game clock operators. When the indoor firecrackers popped out of the catwalk and ribbons of confetti fell from the ceiling as Lions players hugged and slapped backs down on the field, some in the crowd openly wept and stood in their seats long after the game ended.

    If you love football, if you have a pulse, you are moved by that. Hell, at minimum you admire it.

    But then came the long elevator ride into the bowels of the stadium and silent visitors locker room where a group of guys were working hard to process big feelings. Cooper Kupp, who hasn’t looked like himself all year and finished with just five catches for 27 yards, sat with his head in his hands. So did outside linebacker Michael Hoecht, who missed a tackle on second-and-7 on the Lions’ last drive that absolutely had to be a stop. The Rams had one timeout left — McVay used two of them to avoid a delay penalty because of the bone-shattering crowd noise — so the conversion that resulted from the missed tackle gave Detroit a fresh set of downs and so the ability to call a run on the next play to run the clock down to the two-minute warning.

    On second-and-9 underneath the two-minute, Goff — as you are certainly aware, the 2016 No. 1 overall pick of the Rams — threw a quick strike to receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown that picked up 11 yards. Second-year safety Quentin Lake was in coverage. The Rams gave up 21 quick points in the first half on Sunday, but clamped down in the second half to allow only three points.

    “It’s hard to say (out loud),” Lake said, “but I kind of put the weight of the game on my shoulders. You got to make a play in those situations.”

    Before that sequence, the Rams’ offense had the ball with a one-point deficit and faced a third-and-4 at the Detroit 34-yard line, with 4:24 left to play. Right tackle Rob Havenstein was called for a hold, which set up third-and-14. Stafford ducked a pass rusher, then fired a high pass to Puka Nacua, who tried to stretch for it but had his jersey pulled by cornerback Cam Sutton as he coiled up for his jump. The ball tipped off his hands as another Lions player crashed into Nacua.

    “It’s going to sting for a while,” Nacua said. McVay implied postgame, without calling out the officiating crew, that teammates and coaches were justified in looking for a flag in their reaction to that play. Nacua said the Lions were a physical team, but he still believed he could have done a better job of separating for the catch.

    “Teammates counted on me to make plays,” he said, a few long silences mixed in with his answers. “Coach counted on me and dialed up my number. Just wasn’t able to come down with it.”

    Everything in the game Sunday was electricity, noise, successes and failures and reminders, once again, what roster holes there are to fill for the Rams in the coming months. Afterward, it was just bittersweetness personified by the combination of the thousands of devoted Lions fans in the stands and by a small, quiet visitors locker room full of people who are changed forever by this season.

    The Lions won their first playoff game since 1992.

    When football history is made like this, the loser is preserved, too.

    I hope this is also what is remembered about this 2023 Rams team: They were so imperfect. My goodness, what they looked like when they arrived at OTAs in May — I’ve never seen anything like it. The coaches re-taught a group of 44 rookies and new arrivals how to do drills in May, so that they could have functional practices by June. They were laughed right to the bottom of every preseason poll and betting line by pundits from July to September. Many of those people didn’t even start watching this team until December. Growth occurred in small, quiet repeated actions and in failure — and there was a lot of that in the first weeks and even months. They kept showing up.

    Their lives — every coach, every player — became about what they could make of that day, not the season.

    What clichés, right?

    “Be where your feet are.”

    “Be present.”

    “Work works.”

    Yet I was there every day, myself evolving — from grimaces and internal groans at the motivational T-shirts and the catchphrases, to the humbling realization that I was a witness as a group of people grew up, right in front of me. I remember the Super Bowl-winning season in drips and flashes. I will remember this one, far less glamorous as it is, by only a feeling — the pull of being genuinely moved by a group of people who treated each day like the only step backward would be a moment not spent wholly alive.

    In a lot of ways they all stayed imperfect, from the kids to the old guys and certainly their head coach. Their cracks were where joy flooded in.

    “Whew, a jolt of energy, man,” said Stafford of what he got from his teammates in 2023, many of them a decade or more younger than he is.

    “I had a blast. It was a heck of a challenge. I got to sit there and push guys, but also watch guys come into their own in this league. That’s not an easy thing to do. … I’m proud of those guys. And I’m happy to be a part of a team with a group of guys like that

    #148782
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    Participant

    …ok, look at the blue bumper sticker on the wall behind Chris Long.

    #148788
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    #148815
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