Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › setting up the Seattle game
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September 5, 2015 at 7:39 pm #29918znModerator
Jeff Fisher: Todd Gurley won’t play this week; Tre Mason ‘doing well’
Nick Wagoner, ESPN Staff WriterEARTH CITY, Mo. — St. Louis Rams coach Jeff Fisher said Saturday that a decision on rookie running back Todd Gurley’s status for the season opener has already been made.
“Gurley’s not going to play this week,” Fisher said.
So Gurley, who is still recovering from a torn ACL suffered last November, will have to wait before he makes his NFL game debut. Gurley has continued to participate fully in practice though he’s still off-limits for contact.
The Rams have not put a specific date on Gurley’s return but the belief has been that he might start getting carries at some point before the Week 6 bye and then take on a larger role after that. In the meantime, the Rams still have to sort through their options with projected Gurley replacement Tre Mason battling a hamstring issue.
Fisher said last week that Mason would be questionable for the first game against the Seahawks but offered a small update on Mason’s progress.
“Tre’s doing good,” Fisher said. “He had two treatment sessions today, and he’s doing well. So we’ll see how he is during the week.”
With or without Mason in the lineup, the Rams will likely have to lean on Benny Cunningham to play a larger role against the Seahawks on Sept. 13.
September 6, 2015 at 9:41 pm #30016znModeratorhttp://espn.go.com/nfl/team/_/name/stl/st.-louis-rams%5B/quote%5D
Nick Wagoner
ESPN Staff WriterWith Todd Gurley ruled out this week and Tre Mason’s status up in the air, Benny Cunningham says he’s preparing as though he’s going to get a lot of work. Cunningham said outside zone running scheme similar to what he did in college but took some time to re-adjust to being patient enough to run it.
September 7, 2015 at 11:58 am #30035znModeratorfrom off the net
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Ancient Rams Fan
Been commuting up here [to Seattle] from LA for 3 years, finally moved up here early this year. Had Rams season tickets in LA for 10 years before they moved, will be a fan no matter where they play, however long they play, however badly they play. I wanted to share my thoughts on Seattle with my fellow Ram buds.
This town is NUTS!
On Fridays before Hawk games (they call it Blue Friday), they wear their Seahawk jerseys. But it’s not just that, it’s that EVERYONE WEARS THEM. We have over 50 people at our location, and the only 3 not in Seahawk garb are myself and 2 other transplants from Texas. Yes, out of about 50.
This is not unusual. It is the norm up here.
Although I respect the dedication, it sickens me at the same time. You guys can imagine that the crap I take with my Rams license plate and assorted fan gear will reach fever pitch this week as I stroll in with my Rams jersey this Friday (hey, it’s BLUE, right?)…
Anyway, you all need to cheer like there is no tomorrow! From the stadium, your local bar, your living room or your car, BELT IT OUT!
We need this game. I need this game. With all the side bets, I’ll be wearing Lynch and Wilson jerseys every Friday until we play them again late December!
Bring it! Go Rams!
September 7, 2015 at 2:12 pm #30038Eternal RamnationParticipantSorry to say but , Ancient Rams Fan you may have a gambling problem
September 7, 2015 at 2:15 pm #30040znModeratorSt. Louis Rams: The Rams actually began game-planning for Seattle a couple of weeks ago, but those efforts have doubled since the end of the preseason. One thing Rams middle linebacker James Laurinaitis believes will be helpful for the Rams is their familiarity with the Seahawks. But with that in mind, the Rams will spend a little extra time this week preparing for Seattle’s prized addition, tight end Jimmy Graham. — Nick Wagoner
September 8, 2015 at 11:14 pm #30111znModeratorPractice Report 9/8: Starting With Seattle
by Myles Simmons
As divisional opponents, the Rams and Seahawks are two teams who have gotten to know each other quite well over the years. And with that familiarity comes some pretty competitive matchups.
“Need I remind you that we finished with these guys? So we’re coming right back here,” head coach Jeff Fisher said on Tuesday. “And that’s okay. It’s a familiar team. It’s a great challenge for us.”
“We know them, they know us,” offensive lineman Rodger Saffold said. “And when we play, it’s an extremely physical game.”
Since Fisher took over as head coach in 2012, St. Louis is 2-1 against Seattle at the Edward Jones Dome.
Last year’s contest went down to the wire, with the Rams using some nifty special teams plays to secure a 28-26 victory. But don’t necessarily expect too much of the same when the two teams open the season on Sunday.
“We always will have something to draw upon. Whether we dial them up or not that remains to be seen,” Fisher said. “You need the perfect situation for it. I think, not only for Seattle, but the rest of the league understands that we’re one of those teams that’s going to, not take chances, but try to steal possessions with our special teams.”
“We have to play good, solid football,” Fisher added. “We can’t go into a Seattle game expecting to win the game on a fake punt or a special team’s play. We’ve got to play better offense and defense against them.”
A significant part of that effort begins up front on the offensive line. With many young starters on the unit, Saffold said the onus falls on the players to prepare well.
I want to put as much stress as possible on our young linemen, because I think that when you get backed into a corner, sometimes you have your best moments,” Saffold said. “I think they’re going to really be able to study up. They’re going to really watch this team because they know how good that defense can be.”
Saffold, who has moved over to right guard, specifically pointed out how Seattle’s defense uses movement, a variety of blitzes, and its aggressiveness to be effective.
“Those three things are big because we have such a young offensive line,” Saffold said. “We’re going to have to communicate, and communicate loud and often to be able to help out the younger guys see some things.”
SOLIDIFYING THE OFFENSIVE LINE
While Fisher declined to name a starting center on Tuesday, we know the players at the other four positions. From left to right, Greg Robinson, Jamon Brown, Rodger Saffold, and Rob Havenstein will all be along the line at guards and tackles.
The coaches recently flipped guards Saffold and Brown, with Brown now on the left and Saffold on the right. The veteran said Tuesday he’s feeling more and more comfortable with the adjustment.
“It’s a quick switch but all you’ve got to do is work on that side of the ball a little bit before practice, after practice work on a couple sets,” Saffold said. “And then from then on, it’s just meshing with the people you’re next to.”
As for why the switch was made, the rookie said offensive line coach Paul T. Boudreau noticed from film that he’s left-hand dominant, and that a move could pay dividends.
“He told me that I did a lot of things instinctively or naturally on the left side, which was very encouraging for him, and it was encouraging for me,” Brown said. “So I feel like me being left-hand dominant, and being able to do a lot of things with my left will be able to help me on the left side.”
Brown said he was a bit surprised by to head over to the left late in the preseason, but he’s feeling good about playing there.
“Obviously, the type of guy that I am, it doesn’t really matter,” Brown said. “But making that switch kind of told me something. And coach told me what his mindset was going into that game, which was to find the best matchups and combinations that he could. So he was pleased with what I did on the left side and decided to make it final. So that’s what I’m gearing my mind toward, is playing left guard.”
MAKING THE SQUAD
Linebacker Cameron Lynch is one of three undrafted free agents to make the Rams’ initial 53-man roster. Along with wide receiver Bradley Marquez and offensive lineman Darrell Williams, Lynch did enough in training camp to prove he has the mettle to play in the league. And as a UDFA out of Syracuse, Lynch recognized that’s no small feat.
“It’s awesome,” Lynch said. “The stress of the NFL, the camps, the hot sun — all that hard work, it finally pays off. It’s a great feeling.”
We’ll have more on the undrafted rookies on the active roster in a feature article later this week.
September 9, 2015 at 4:45 pm #30134znModeratorPete Carroll confirms Kam Chancellor won’t play against Rams
http://mynorthwest.com/292/2807896/Pete-Carroll-confirms-Kam-Chancellor-wont-play-against-Rams
Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll has confirmed that safety Kam Chancellor will not play in Sunday’s game against the St. Louis Rams.
“He’s not here right now and so he’s not playing, that’s it,” Carroll said in a news conference after training camp on Wednesday.
710 ESPN Seattle’s Danny O’Neil said that the implication is that Chancellor won’t be playing in Week 1 regardless of anything else that happens leading up to the game.
“I am disappointed in this … It’s disappointing it’s come to this and he’s not here,” Carroll said.
September 9, 2015 at 7:20 pm #30140znModeratorfrom off the net
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Drexl
FWIW, Cortana picks Rams over Seahawks
The Microsoft prediction engine thinks the Rams will win. Mostly it aligned with the favorites, but this game was one of the exceptions.
It had a 67% rate last season.
Article at: http://sports.yahoo.com/news/microsoft-engine-predicts-nfl-games-141521168.html
September 9, 2015 at 7:49 pm #30142ZooeyModerator===
FWIW, Cortana picks Rams over Seahawks
The Microsoft prediction engine thinks the Rams will win. Mostly it aligned with the favorites, but this game was one of the exceptions.
It had a 67% rate last season.
Article at: http://sports.yahoo.com/news/microsoft-engine-predicts-nfl-games-141521168.html
Pete Prisco picks the Rams to win as well.
So does WV.
I don’t think RFL picked the Rams, though, but his voice was all muffled on account of his head being inside an oven.
September 9, 2015 at 10:27 pm #30151znModeratorPotential upset between Seahawks vs. Rams
The NFL Live crew discusses who will win between the Seattle Seahawks and the St. Louis Rams.
September 10, 2015 at 1:12 am #30162znModeratorKam Chancellor replacement Dion Bailey on the Rams: “I hope they plan to come at me.”
Curtis Crabtree
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/category/rumor-mill/
Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll ruled out any possibility of starting strong safety Kam Chancellor playing in Sunday’s season opener against the St. Louis Rams as Chancellor’s holdout continues.
In Chancellor’s place, Dion Bailey will make the start for Seattle in the first regular season game of his NFL career.
So instead of getting a three-time Pro Bowl selection and two-time second-team All-Pro, the Rams will get a former undrafted rookie playing in his first real game.
Bailey knows as well as anyone that the Rams will likely come after him Sunday. He hopes they do.
“I hope they plan to come at me,” Bailey said. “It’ll make my coming out party a lot more exciting. The more opportunities to make plays, the more plays I’ll make.”
Bailey made a strong impression in training camp last year after being signed as an undrafted free agent out of USC. However, an injury led to his release before returning on the practice squad. He started this year’s camp on the Physically Unable to Perform list, but quickly ascended toward the top of the depth chart once he was able to practice. He started the last three preseason games at strong safety for Seattle.
“Dion Bailey has had a great offseason and camp for us,” Carroll said. “He’s been in that position for quite a while with us. We feel very comfortable that he understands the principles and the fits and all the things he has to do. He’s a playmaker and he’s a very aggressive tackler, so we’re going to count on him to do the things he does well, and hopefully fit him in with this group. We’re moving, we’re ready to go. We’ve had a long time getting ready with him, so we feel comfortable with that.”
Bailey knows he isn’t Chancellor and can’t play the game the same way his absent counterpart can. However, Bailey’s confidence clearly came through in speaking about his hopes for Sunday’s debut.
“For the first time in my life going into a big game, I don’t feel any pressure,” Bailey said. “I’m not here to fill Kam’s shoes. I’m here to be the best Dion Bailey I can, and the best Dion Bailey has done me well so far for the first 23 years of my life, so I like my chances on Sunday.”
September 10, 2015 at 2:26 am #30164MackeyserModeratorI’m SOOO excited for this game!!!
Sports is the crucible of human virtue. The distillate remains are human vice.
September 10, 2015 at 2:43 am #30166znModeratorI’m SOOO excited for this game!!!
Going to be a good one.
September 10, 2015 at 2:44 am #30167znModeratorRam notes: Rookies Havenstein, Brown rarin’ to go
Joe Lyons
Jamon Brown is ready to play some football.
“This is what you dream of when you grow up playing ball,’’ Brown, a rookie guard, said following practice Wednesday at Rams Park. “Sunday for me … I’m beyond grateful. I feel like we’ve done a good body of work to this point, from OTAs, in camp and through the preseason. Going up against our D-line in practice every day has definitely prepared us.
“I can’t wait.’’
The Rams open the season Sunday, hosting two-time defending NFC champion Seattle at noon.
Brown, a third-round draft pick from Louisville, sat out the exhibition finale because of a sprained ankle and is the probable starter at left guard. The starter at right tackle, Rob Havenstein, also is set to make his NFL debut. Havenstein, from Wisconsin, was drafted in the second round.
“I’m very excited and looking forward to getting out there for the first time,’’ Havenstein said. “I just want play with confidence and try to build on the positives so far.
“You’re always going to have things to work on, to clean up, but overall I feel pretty good. At the end of the day, it’s football, only now the guys we’re up against are bigger, stronger and faster than they were in college.’’
Havenstein continued: “I don’t want to say it’s just another game — that doesn’t do the Seahawks justice. But for my purposes, being a rookie, my approach is to try and slow things down and really focus on what I need to do to make each play work.’’
Brown has had to make two key transitions in the NFL — moving from tackle to guard and then from the right to the left.
“You go from playing on an island to a phone booth,’’ he said of the tackle-to-guard move. “Everything happens a little quicker inside, so you just have to be more precise as far as your technique.’’
The challenge of moving from right to left, he said, is more mental than physical.
“You have to find a way to flip things in your head,’’ he said. “You hear a play and your first thought is that you’re on the front side of the play and then you realize that, no, you’re on the backside. Just a matter of making sure you’re focused.’’
SAFFOLD PROGRESSING
After undergoing surgery on his left shoulder in the offseason, right guard Rodger Saffold hurt his right shoulder in the first series of the team’s exhibition opener at Oakland and did not play against Tennessee, Indianapolis and Kansas City.But he says he is “absolutely’’ playing on Sunday.“It felt really good today,’’ he said Wednesday. “It felt good punching. I’m still working on it heavy because I’ve got to make sure I get this thing feeling as comfortable as possible for Sunday.’’
INJURY REPORT
The initial injury report of the season for the Rams includes just three players. Running back Tre Mason (hamstring) and linebacker Daren Bates (knee) did not practice. Running back Todd Gurley (knee) was limited.For the Seahawks, linebacker Mike Morgan (hamstring) has been ruled out, with running back Marshawn Lynch (not injury related), tight end Cooper Helfet (knee) and backup quarterback Tarvaris Jackson (ankle) being limited.And strong safety Kam Chancellor, who remains a holdout, won’t play. Dion Bailey is to start in Chancellor’s absence.
CAPTAINS NAMED
Voted on by the players, the Rams named their captains for the season — quarterback Nick Foles on offense, middle linebacker James Laurinaitis and defensive end Robert Quinn on defense and punter Johnny Hekker and linebacker Daren Bates on special teams.Coach Jeff Fisher said the voting on defense and special teams was tight and that he elected to go for two captains instead going to another vote.It’s the fourth season as captain for Laurinaitis, a seventh-year pro from Ohio State.
RAM-BLINGS
Fisher is considering changing the team’s league-mandatory weekly day off from Tuesday to Thursday this season. But it won’t start until next week.Thursday “we’re going to do some things, but we’re not going to have a full-speed practice,’’ the coach said. “All the research is showing us that it might make more sense to take some time off and rest and recover closer to the game as opposed to Monday (or) Tuesday.’’
• Brandon Dixon, a defensive back from Northwest Missouri State, has been signed to Seattle’s practice squad. Originally drafted by the Jets in 2014, Dixon played in 14 games with Tampa Bay last year, finishing with nine tackles, two pass defenses and an interception.
• According to the latest NFL Players Association figures, the Rams have $6.7 million in salary-cap room following the cut to 53 players.
• Former Rams defensive end Gerald Rivers, who played in two games and recorded one tackle here in 2013 and has also been with Jacksonville, Miami and Denver, was signed to the New York Giants practice squad.
September 10, 2015 at 1:26 pm #30183AgamemnonParticipantThursday, September 10, 2015
Rams banking on revamped run game to get in the zone
By Nick WagonerEARTH CITY, Mo. — After Frank Cignetti took over as the St. Louis Rams new offensive coordinator early this offseason, he promised that there’d be some changes coming.
With former tight ends coach Rob Boras promoted to assistant head coach/offense with a focus on the run game, the Rams offered a clear glimpse at who they are hoping to become offensively. The emphasis and devotion to creating a run game that can move the chains, control the clock and offer quarterback Nick Foles opportunities to make plays down the field became more clear in the NFL draft when the Rams selected running back Todd Gurley No. 10 overall and followed with four offensive linemen.
On Sunday, the Rams will lift the curtain on their new-look offense against the daunting Seattle Seahawks defense after a preseason in which they once again took a vanilla approach to play calling.
“We went into the preseason with thoughts about what we wanted to get done before we even played a game,” Cignetti said. “We looked at it and said, ‘Hey we get four preseason games, what do we want to do in each game?’ from a standpoint of a run plan, a protection plan and a pass game plan.”
Benny Cunningham
Benny Cunningham, who rushed for 246 yards and three TDs in 2014, could be the man of the moment for the Rams.
While Cignetti has installed some tweaks all over the offense, it’s the changes made to the run game that will perhaps be the biggest factor in whether the Rams can have more success offensively in the first season with Cignetti at the helm.“It’s important for everything we do as an offense,” rookie guard Jamon Brown said. “Establishing the run early allows us once we get to the pass downs to be able to do what we’re trying to do and that’s convert those pass downs, those third downs. If we have positive yards on first and second down, it makes it easier for us on third downs. So establishing the run early is going to be very important for us and I think we’ve got the guys up front that are ready to get down and get dirty a little bit and open some holes for our backs to do our thing.”
To be sure, the Rams aren’t completely overhauling the offense or the run game. In addition to some of the power man-blocking concepts they’ve used in recent years, they intend to add more outside zone plays to the mix.
For the offensive line, outside zone concepts ask them to move laterally and push defenders to the side to open cutback lanes. That means they have to be diligent about moving fast to make things happen, especially as they adjust to lining up in a three-point stance on a consistent basis.
“If you are coming from a team that runs the read option and all those things in a two-point stance, it is a major adjustment,” offensive line coach Paul Boudreau said. “That’s a big adjustment for these guys. Even from high school, some of these guys have never put their hand in the dirt.”
For the running back, his task is fairly simple on the surface. His job is to find a hole, make one cut and go. It has been a staple of the Seahawks over the past few years and comes with one important prerequisite: patience.
“I feel like with this scheme, it’s more patience,” running back Benny Cunningham said. “You have got to be real patient and trust everybody. It’s not a lot of difference but the outside zone we are doing now, I feel like it’s just about being patient.”
From the Rams’ perspective, the adjustment shouldn’t be anything they can’t handle though they are also charged with the task of getting off to a fast start despite some moving personnel pieces. With Tre Mason (hamstring) and Gurley (knee) recovering from injuries, the Rams will likely look to Cunningham to jumpstart the offense.
Cunningham said he played in a scheme with a lot of outside zone at Middle Tennessee State and though he had to relearn it this offseason, it has come back fairly easily. According to Cunningham, the mantra for all Rams runners this offseason has been “slow to, fast through” the hole as a way of reminding themselves to be patient.
In two years with the Rams, Cunningham has not started a game and had double-digit carries in a game only once. But if his opportunity arises against a Seattle defense that held the Rams to just 3.13 yards per carry in two meetings last year, Cunningham knows it won’t be easy but that he must take advantage of the chance.
“Anytime you get the opportunity to kind of remind the team how valuable you can be, you try to look forward to those opportunities,” Cunningham said.
As for the offensive linemen, Rob Havenstein said Wisconsin did a little bit of outside zone when he was in college but the Badgers were more inside zone and power. Those will still be part of the Rams’ attack in 2015, but Havenstein said he’s adjusted well to new concepts.
Brown said he did a lot of zone in college at Louisville so it hasn’t been much of a change.
“It helped me make that transition to this level being able to do that in college and how often we did it helped me,” Brown said. “So really, I’m just trying to use the tools I learned in college, maybe tweak them a little bit to make it so I can do it at the NFL level and then go.”
If the line and the backs can make it work early, it would go a long way toward helping the Rams’ offense become what they envisioned when the offseason began.
September 10, 2015 at 1:51 pm #30185AgamemnonParticipantUDFAs Make Initial 53-Man Roster
Posted 3 hours ago
Austin Lankford Digital Media Intern @AustinLankford3
The road to making a 53-man roster is grueling. The climb is that much steeper for rookie undrafted free agents, but after two rounds of cuts the Rams have three.
Offensive tackle Darrell Williams will be the first to say there were people who questioned his decision to come to St. Louis after the organization drafted four linemen this year.
“But the Rams were in contact with me after I came back from the NFLPA Bowl that I played in,” Williams said. “During the entire pre-draft process they were talking to me.
Boudreau called me and told me I’d get a fair shot here. I did and made the most and took advantage of it, and I’m still here.”
The two-year starter out of South Florida said he was with linebacker Bryce Hager and fellow lineman Cody Wichmann when they received their calls from head coach Jeff Fisher.
“I thought Bryce got cut because he was talking so low and he didn’t show much emotion on his face so I kind of got scared for a second,” Williams said. “Then coach Fisher called me and I was so happy. I talked to my agent, my parents, and family members and it’s still catching up to me now.”
Linebacker Cameron Lynch said he actually missed the initial phone call and responded to Fisher after receiving a voice mail from the head coach.
“I felt good and I felt like I put the hard work in,” Lynch said. “The stretch to the NFL, the camps under the hot sun, and all the hard work has finally paid off and it’s a great feeling.”
Lynch feels strongly that special teams is a reason he made the roster, noting he made a point to meet with special teams coordinator John Fassel as much as possible.
“I definitely bugged him,” Lynch said. “You have to and I’m glad I did.”
Bradley Marquez, the wide receiver out of Texas Tech, said his emotions during the call from Fisher are hard to explain after working toward the NFL for so long.
“You have a dream your entire life and that phone call fulfills it and lets you know that you made an NFL roster so it’s pure excitement,” Marquez said. “It was awesome and I’m blessed for the opportunity to be with a great organization.”
All three players expressed gratitude and excitement, but also know that the road doesn’t end with Fisher’s phone call.
“There’s still a 100 percent sense of urgency and you cannot change your approach now that you think you have arrived,” Marquez said. “I did fulfill a dream of mine, but that’s over with now and I have to continue to improve and achieve newer goals that I want to accomplish. You can’t stay the same and go back to old habits. You have to continue to do the things that got you here.”
Lynch said he was able to briefly take a deep breath, but the work is just now starting with the Seahawks coming to town and a full season ahead.
Williams referred to a phrase one of his college coaches used to say: “Don’t lighten up, tighten up.”
“Yeah cuts are over, but I know how this league works,” Williams said. “Any minute you could be the next one on your way out, so I just want to keep playing hard every day and make them have to keep me here.”
September 10, 2015 at 1:51 pm #30186PA RamParticipantGurley playing the role of Lynch in practice:
Welcome to “Six Points” for Week 1, a quick trip around the league with Adam Schefter and Chris Mortensen.
When to expect Todd Gurley
It’s difficult to find a better moniker for an NFL player than “Beast Mode,” aka Marshawn Lynch, who takes the field when the Seattle Seahawks open the season on the road against the St. Louis Rams.
And when Lynch gets his first handoff this season, it no doubt will draw some sarcasm in the social media world given that most think Lynch should have gotten the last carry of last season — what most assume would have been a short Super Bowl-clinching plunge.
What we won’t see is the first official rushing attempt by Todd Gurley, the former Georgia running back who was the Rams’ No. 10 pick in the 2015 NFL draft despite having surgery to repair an ACL last November.
Gurley won’t play Sunday, but he is playing “Beast Mode” for the Rams’ scout team this week while he experiences the most physical contact he has had since joining the Rams. There will be no tackling Gurley to the ground, but he will be “bumped” and “thudded” by Rams defenders. The Rams will measure Gurley’s readiness for the next phase before they suit him up for real, which is expected to happen sometime in the next month if he has no setbacks.
What are the expectations for a healthy Gurley?
Rams coach Jeff Fisher talks about the “size, power and acceleration” that the rookie brings to the team. The Rams, along with other teams in the NFL, believe Gurley is the best running back prospect to enter the NFL since Adrian Peterson, who was the No. 7 pick in the 2007 draft, while Lynch went 12th to the Buffalo Bills.
The Seahawks will be content not having to deal with Gurley, whom they rated as the best player in the draft, until they meet again Dec. 27 in Seattle.
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick
September 10, 2015 at 2:00 pm #30187AgamemnonParticipantYou know, if Mason’s Hamstring lingers, we might see Gurley before we see Mason.
btw, This is a good video. Rams Report: 53-Man Roster Breakdown
Join reporter Dani Klupenger and insider Myles Simmons as they take an inside look at the Rams’ 53-Man Roster http://www.stlouisrams.com/videos/videos/Rams-Report-53-Man-Roster-Breakdown/6bae10e5-0c17-4d33-85a9-b04d9520cc93September 11, 2015 at 1:50 am #30221znModeratorbtw, This is a good video. Rams Report: 53-Man Roster Breakdown
Join reporter Dani Klupenger and insider Myles Simmons as they take an inside look at the Rams’ 53-Man Roster http://www.stlouisrams.com/videos/videos/Rams-Report-53-Man-Roster-Breakdown/6bae10e5-0c17-4d33-85a9-b04d9520cc93Thanks for the heads up.
I copied that to another thread too.
September 11, 2015 at 1:50 am #30222znModeratorRams’ special teams trickery has Seattle’s attention
Jim Thomas
Last year it was the infamous “Mountaineer” play, and then a fake punt. Three years ago, it was a fake field goal and an onside kick. The result was a pair of upset victories by the Rams over Seattle.
You think the Seahawks are working overtime this week on stopping every special teams trick play known to man?
“Oh yeah,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said. “You can tell them that. We are.”
On Sept. 30, 2012 at the Edward Jones Dome, in just the fourth game for coach Jeff Fisher with the Rams, his team lined up for a chip-shot field goal attempt late in the first half. But punter Johnny Hekker, who doubles as the team’s holder, took the snap, stood up, and fired a two-yard touchdown pass to Danny Amendola to give St. Louis a 10-7 lead.
“A bit of a hideout situation,” Hekker recalled. “Danny was in the play before, so he didn’t have to go inside the numbers to declare (he was in the game).”
After a third-down play, Amendola lingered near the sideline, never left the field, and his presence went undetected by the Seahawks. It’s the kind of play you might see in a high school game … but in the NFL?
As a topper, the Rams successfully executed an onside kick and turned that into a franchise-record 60-yard field goal by Greg Zuerlein. The Rams ended up winning 19-3.
Not even that 2012 trickery can match what took place last Oct. 13. In a 28-26 Rams victory at the Dome, Stedman Bailey scored a 90-yard touchdown on a bit of punt return trickery known as the Mountaineer.
With some great acting by return man Tavon Austin and most of the Rams’ punt return team, basically the entire Seattle coverage unit headed that way, thinking the ball had been kicked to Austin. Alas, the ball had been punted to the other side of the field, where Bailey fielded it and raced to the end zone against token resistance.
Bailey still sees the play pop up once in a while on social media, and his reaction is usually the same.
“Wow. We really did pull that off,” Bailey said. “A pretty spectacular play and I love it.”
It wouldn’t have been possible without the acting job by Austin, and because of that, Austin says he and Bailey long ago reached agreement on how the TD should be credited.
“Half and half,” Austin said. “He told me half his touchdown goes to me.”
If the fake field goal and its design three years ago was rare, how do you categorize the Mountaineer, so named because Bailey and Austin played college ball for the West Virginia Mountaineers?
“It’s probably a good chance it won’t happen again,” Austin said.
Maybe so, but the Seahawks undoubtedly will be on high alert for anything funky from the Rams in Sunday’s season opener, a noon kickoff at the Dome.
“They should be preparing for that 13-man punt formation,” Hekker joked. “We’ve been running that one a lot. Nine-man field goals — all this crazy stuff.”
Because of what happened in those past games, the odds say nothing of the sort happens Sunday, and if it does, it’s unsuccessful.
Rest assured, however, that Fisher and special teams coordinator John Fassel have some unused goodies left in their bag of tricks.
“We always will have something to draw upon,” Fisher said. “Whether we dial ’em up or not, that remains to be seen. You need the perfect situation for it.
“I think not only Seattle, but the rest of the league, understands that we’re one of those teams that’s going to — not take chances — but try to steal possessions with our special teams.”
But Fisher added: “We can’t go into a Seattle game expecting to win the game on a fake punt or a special teams play. We’ve got to play better offense and defense against them.”
Doing so obviously is easier said than done. Even with the special teams trickery that led to those victories over Seattle, the Rams are a mere 3-17 against their NFC West rivals since 2005. Over the past decade, the only team that has a worse record against a division foe is Buffalo at 2-18 against New England in the AFC East.
The headliners for Seattle are well-known by now: quarterback Russell Wilson and running back Marshawn Lynch on offense, cornerback Richard Sherman and free safety Earl Thomas heading up the Legion of Boom on defense.
Hard-hitting safety Kam Chancellor, in the midst of a contract holdout, won’t play. But the Seahawks added another marquee player in the offseason, acquiring all-world tight end Jimmy Graham from New Orleans.
“They utilized the tight ends quite a bit last year, especially in our games, and they made some plays,” Fisher said. “Then you add somebody like Jim that’s got great ability, and catch radius, and run-after-catch. It’s gonna be a concern.”
The mere presence of Graham means that ganging up on Lynch and the Seattle running game becomes that much more difficult.
On the other side of the ball, the Rams’ new starting quarterback (Nick Foles) and new offensive coordinator (Frank Cignetti) are up against the NFL’s top-ranked defense from a year ago. Foles faces Seattle for the first time, and does so behind the league’s most inexperienced offensive line, one that will start rookies Rob Havenstein and Jamon Brown.
“I think they’ll try to create some one-on-one matchups and step up in some gaps and try to confuse us,” Fisher said of the Seahawks. “But we’ve got a smart group up front. We wouldn’t have put (Brown and Havenstein) in a position to start if we didn’t think they were gonna get the job done. And they’re only going to get better.”
September 11, 2015 at 2:05 am #30224znModerator
Gregg Williams Has Rams Thinking “DMSU”http://stlouis.cbslocal.com/2015/09/10/gregg-williams-has-rams-thinking-dmstf/
ST. LOUIS (AP) — After practice Wednesday, St. Louis Rams outside linebacker Alec Ogletree was wearing a T-shirt with the initials “DMSU” on the front.
No, it’s not some obscure institution of higher learning or the latest nutritional concoction. The initials stand for “Don’t Make Stuff Up.”
All the linebackers have them, as reminders not to be freelancing on the field, but to stick to defensive coordinator Gregg Williams’s system. That reminder figures to come in handy for the opener when all-field threat Russell Wilson and the NFC champion Seattle Seahawks come to town.
“Coach is always joking around that if you did something that he didn’t coach, he’d say DMSU,” Ogletree said. “It’s kind of our little motto.”
Wilson blankets the top 10 in franchise history for rushing yards by a quarterback, including 106 yards on seven carries last year in St. Louis. He’s thrown 72 touchdown passes, sixth most in NFL history, and has produced 15 game-winning drives in the fourth quarter or overtime, most in the league since he broke in as a third-round pick in 2012.
Plus, he’s got a new tight end in Jimmy Graham, who leads his position in receptions the last four years and is fourth overall in that stretch.
The Rams (6-10) have high hopes for their defense, which has five former first-rounders on the front line. For the franchise to end a string of 11 consecutive seasons without a winning record, the defense must step up.
“Who better else to start with than the NFC champions?” tackle Michael Brockers said.
But they can’t afford to get carried away, and must respect Wilson.
“Russell’s very, very difficult to defend,” coach Jeff Fisher said.
What to watch for:
SUPER BOWL HANGOVER
Beyond the potential mind games lingering from Wilson’s lamentable last-minute end zone interception against the Patriots, the Seahawks open minus star holdout safety Kam Chancellor. Dion Bailey will make his NFL debut in place of Chancellor, who faces potential team fines in excess of $1 million.
“I mean, everybody’s disappointed,” cornerback Richard Sherman said. “You’ve got to treat it like he’s not going to be here, because he isn’t.”
Two offensive linemen will be starting for the first time. Garry Gilliam is the new right tackle and unknown Drew Nowak won the center spot.
Because of Nowak’s inexperience, the Seahawks are asking more from Wilson in pre-snap reads and calling protections. Seattle has used the same five on the line for the last three weeks since inserting Gilliam at a tackle and shifting Justin Britt to left guard.
ROOKIE RESPONSIBILITY: The Rams have no advantage on the offensive line, breaking in rookie tackle Rob Havenstein and guard Jamon Brown. They finally settled the center competition won by veteran backup Tim Barnes just four days before kickoff.
“There’s going to be a big learning curve for our guys, and I’m sure their guys as well,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said.
LEGION OF WHOM: What’s long been a strength for Seattle is now a bit of a question.
Other than missing Chancellor and breaking in Bailey, Thomas is coming off left shoulder surgery and did not play in the preseason. Sherman and Earl Thomas still patrol the back end, but the secondary may not be as imposing as the past two years when the Seahawks had the best pass defense in the NFL.
HOME FIELD: Seattle has won five of six in the series, but the Rams have taken two of the last three at home. All three games have been decided by six or fewer points.
There might not be a crowd advantage in the Edward Jones Dome, given general resignation that owner Stan Kroenke intends to move the franchise back to Los Angeles after the season. For both of the home preseason games, the 66,000-seat dome was probably about one-fourth full.
FOLES DEBUT: Nick Foles got a two-year contract extension before taking a single preseason snap. He’s perceived as a better injury risk than Sam Bradford and comes cheaper, too. Foles will have to get the ball out fast given the inexperience up front, and the Rams must develop a go-to wide receiver. Brian Quick, coming off potential career-ending shoulder surgery, could be the one to step up.
September 11, 2015 at 10:23 am #30230znModeratorRams keeping eyes wide open when it comes to defending Jimmy Graham
Nick Wagoner
EARTH CITY, Mo. — Perhaps in an effort to keep their newest weapon under wraps as long as possible, the Seattle Seahawks didn’t ask much of newly acquired Jimmy Graham in their preseason games.
In watching the tape this week to glean how the Seahawks might intend to use their Pro Bowl tight end, Rams coach Jeff Fisher saw, well, not much.
“We suspect they have a lot of things in for him because you didn’t really see much of him in the passing game in the preseason,” Fisher said.
But just because the Rams haven’t seen how the Seahawks plan to use Graham doesn’t mean they lack the knowledge needed to slow him down. In fact, the Rams have players and coaches who are plenty familiar with Graham. And to hear them tell it, defending the 6-foot-7, 265-pound Graham doesn’t come down to things like strength or speed.
“You have to be very good with your eyes,” linebacker James Laurinaitis said. “A lot of times, when they do play action stuff, those guys are in the flat. But with a guy like Jimmy Graham, if you are a few steps behind, it’s hard to catch him. A lot of times even when you are in coverage, his jump radius, his ability to go up for it is challenging, but I really like our guys we have. [He’s] just another piece of ammunition for them and a great challenge.”
Since Graham entered the league in 2010, he has played the Rams three times. In those three games, Graham has been held to seven catches for 85 yards with no touchdowns. In those meetings, the Rams have mixed and matched ways to defend Graham, even using cornerback Janoris Jenkins on him in a 2013 victory.
With Graham now in the NFC West and on the schedule twice per year, defensive coordinator Gregg Williams figures to throw multiple looks at Graham. Williams knows Graham well from their time together in New Orleans and has another player who is plenty familiar with Graham.
That would be safety Mark Barron, who spent his first 2½ seasons in Tampa Bay, one of the Saints’ division rivals. Former Buccaneers special assistant Butch Davis once said the Bucs used the seventh overall choice on Barron in 2012 as a direct response to Graham’s emergence in New Orleans.
Although Graham had a 10-catch, 179-yard performance against Tampa Bay in Week 2 of the 2013 season, safety Dashon Goldson covered Graham in the first half when Graham had eight catches for 156 yards and a touchdown. In the second half, with Barron covering him, Graham managed two catches for 23 yards and Barron finished with 10 tackles.
The key to slowing Graham? Barron echoed Laurinaitis.
“As long as we keep our eyes right and don’t make mistakes, we’ll be fine,” Barron said. “In my opinion, that’s the key. A lot of his plays, he is tricky with his routes. So a lot of times, guys have bad eyes and guess the wrong thing. So I think we have to make sure we are smart with our eyes and we’ll be fine.”
Most tight ends are pretty straightforward with their routes because they aren’t athletic enough to change direction like receivers. But Graham is a different beast. Whether it’s Jenkins, a linebacker like Alec Ogletree or a safety like Barron or T.J. McDonald drawing the assignment, one false step and Graham can run right by for a big play.
“He’s just a really good football player,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said. “He came to us well-equipped. We’re thrilled about the kind of player that he is, but even more so about the person that he is. He’s just jumped in with our team and fit right in and has been accepted. Now it’s just a process of getting to utilize the things he can do and developing and building the chemistry between the quarterback and receiver and all of that kind of cool stuff. That will improve for some time I think, but he looks like everything you’ve seen. He’s legit. He can make big plays and be a factor, so we’re hoping to fit him in the offense and make him a regular part of it.”
And the Rams are hoping that process take at least an extra week for Graham to fit in. To make that happen, it’s all about the eyes.
September 11, 2015 at 5:19 pm #30236znModeratorSix Points: Seahawks vs. Rams
FOX Sports
Sep 11, 2015 at 8:30a ET SHARE 4 TWEET 5
http://www.foxsports.com/nfl/story/six-points-seahawks-vs-rams-091115
It’s a tale of teams at different stages heading into 2015.
The Seahawks have been perched atop the league for the last three seasons, and are seeking a third straight Super Bowl appearance. After a crushing Super Bowl XLIX loss, Seattle reloaded and acquired Jimmy Graham in the offseason to boost their offense. However, they will also be without the services of one of their best players on the defensive side in Kam Chancellor (contract holdout).
Meanwhile, the Rams are simply trying to clinch a playoff berth for the first time since 2004. St. Louis’ strength lies in a young defensive front the organization has built through the draft. It is the Rams’ offense, though, that needs some time to build chemistry with a number of new faces, including quarteback Nick Foles.
Here are three keys to the game for both the Seahawks and the Rams.SEAHAWKS
1. Focus, focus, focus
The Rams unleashed trick plays in handing the Seahawks their third loss of the season in October. Heading into 2015, Seattle is once again the favorite to win the NFC West, while St. Louis could be a team on the rise, or floundering in mediocrity based on Jeff Fisher’s track record the last three seasons. If there’s anything the Seahawks need to know, all they have to do is pull up the tape from Oct. 20, 2014, and be wary of anything the Rams will try to do to pull out a win in their home opener.
2. Protect Russell Wilson
The problems centering around the offensive line in the preseason were evident. Though coach Tom Cable said his starting unit could be the best he’s coached, the group is far from a finished product. On the other side, the Rams boast arguably the best defensive front in the league, headlined by Robert Quinn and Aaron Donald. If the Seahawks expect to get anything going on offense, protecting Wilson is paramount.
3. Pressure Foles
The Rams are working in two rookies along the offensive line, and a center with little starting experience (four games). And it will be Foles’ first career start. The Seahawks defense is known to generate a ton of pressure, so it wouldn’t be surprising to see Kris Richard’s unit force Foles and the rest of the offense to make plays outside their comfort zone.RAMS
1. Keep Foles upright
The Rams’ young offensive line will be tasked with slowing down the league’s best defense for three straight seasons. Foles is no stranger to seeing pressure; he was sacked 37 times from the 2013-14 seasons while in Philadelphia. If the Rams hope to have any chance of winning Week 1, they’ll need to protect Foles and give him time in the pocket.
2. Attack Seahawks secondary
If Foles is able to buy time in the pocket, the Rams boast a number of weapons on the outside that have big-play potential, including Tavon Austin, Brian Quick and Stedman Bailey. The Seahawks will have three new faces in the secondary starting alongside Richard Sherman and Earl Thomas: Dion Bailey, rookie Tye Smith and offseason signee Cary Williams. Most notably, they’ll be without Chancellor.
3. Wreak havoc in the backfield
There’s no question the Rams’ strength lies in their defensive front. But Quinn, Donald and Co. face a tall task in trying to slow down Marshawn Lynch and making Wilson uncomfortable. The Rams defensive unit will need to try generating pressure to make life uneasy for the Seahawks offensive line, and force Lynch and Wilson work.September 12, 2015 at 3:39 pm #30272znModeratorRams seek fast start, might need defense to provide it
Nick Wagoner, ESPN Staff Writer
EARTH CITY, Mo. — Of the many tactics St. Louis Rams defensive coordinator Gregg Williams uses to get his players to respond, he’s leaned a little more on Pavlov than any others during this offseason.
At the start of every meeting, Williams has ingrained two words into his players’ heads: Start fast. Sometimes it includes a picture of a race car at the starting line or Usain Bolt in the blocks about to take off. Whatever the case, Williams has rarely let a day or meeting go by without a reminder of the defense — and, by extension, the team’s — top priority is this season.
“It’s every day,” Williams said. “Every meeting that we have. Every single, solitary meeting that we have, the very first thing that’s on the screen is, ‘Start fast.’ Some days we discuss it. Other days we just look at it.”
When Williams is feeling particularly Pavlovian, he takes it away, just to see the response he gets.
“What I’ve done is played with them a little bit,” Williams said. “When they come into the meeting room, it’s not on the screen. ‘Where is it?’ Then I click the button. ‘Oh, I just wanted to see if you saw it.’ So, it’s their idea, so it’s good.”
The “start fast” mantra doesn’t just apply to the defense. It’s a must for a franchise that historically has been unable to overcome slow starts. The last time the St. Louis Rams made the playoffs after a 2-3 or worse start was 1952. This season, they start the season with four of their first five games against opponents that won at least 11 games a year ago, tied for the second-most difficult opening five games in the league.
All of that for a team seeking to break the longest active streak of losing seasons in the NFL (eight) and the fourth longest streak of seasons (10) without a playoff berth.
But make no mistake, though the entire team would ideally get off to a fast start, the onus will fall largely on the defense.
“Defense will often times win games for you,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said. “I’m not anticipating struggles on offense, but in the event that there are, the defense is going to have to find a way to play well and keep people out of the end zone.”
Fisher might not be anticipating offensive struggles, but there are many who are, especially in Week 1 against Seattle’s vaunted defense. The Rams offense underwent a major overhaul in the offseason and feature a new quarterback, coordinator, running back and three new starters on the offensive line. Expecting that group to come up with big scoring outbursts is asking a lot, and even if it does come together, it seems unlikely it would happen right away.
Which is where the defense comes in. It has been burdened with top-five expectations in recent seasons, but only lived up to them in short spurts. Last season, the unit struggled so much against the run in the first five weeks — the defense was tied for 29th in allowing 152.5 yards per game on the ground — that it rarely earned the chance to rush the passer. The result was league record for futility with one sack in the first five games.
That shouldn’t and can’t happen again in 2015. Williams returns 10 starters from last season’s defense, and the lone change was one the team considers an upgrade with Akeem Ayers at strongside linebacker. The players know the system, the coach knows the players and everyone knows the urgency of the situation.
“It’s fun to see the familiarity of what we do, why we do,” Williams said. “There’s not very many questions anymore about, ‘How do you do this? Why do you do this?'”
If nothing else, Williams takes solace in the fact that there’s nothing he hasn’t covered with his group. The fast start has been emphasized as a big-picture point, but so have all of the little details.
“The thing I feel comfortable about is, it’s been covered,” Williams said. “It’s been discussed. Any person that’s a teacher, if it’s a coach that’s a mentor, when it becomes more important to the person, to the participant that’s actually out on the field, when it becomes their idea, it’s when you have a chance to make change. All I do is present the ideas. This has been a fun group to see how they grasp that, and they’ve used that in all of the things they’re doing, so we’ll see. This is a good start and we need to start fast, we really do.”
September 12, 2015 at 5:48 pm #30284znModeratorRams-Seahawks: Five Things to Watch
BY NORM SANDERS
News-Democrathttp://www.bnd.com/sports/nfl/st-louis-rams/article35031273.html#storylink=cpy
Here are five critical areas to watch when the St. Louis Rams open their 2015 season at home Sunday against the Seattle Seahawks at the Edward Jones Dome (noon; TV-Fox Channel 2; Radio-WXOS-FM 101.1):
1. How will the Rams’ inexperienced offensive line deal with one of the top defenses in the NFL?
That’s a question that may help decide this game. Even without holdout star safety Kam Chancellor, the Seahawks have an aggressive front seven (especially defensive ends Michael Bennett and Frank Clark) that will likely blitz a lot and allow all-world cornerback Richard Sherman to try to shut down whichever receiver Seattle chooses. Look for the Rams to provide extra blocking help with tight ends and use quick drops and short pass patterns, but this is a formidable defense. Rookie right tackle Rob Havenstein will have his hands full.
2. The Rams want to control the ball on the ground with a solid running attack, so how does that happen?
With rookie Todd Gurley ruled out and Tre Mason (hamstring) a game-time decision, it looks like the job falls to Benny Cunningham and Isaiah Pead. And they will be trying to move the ball behind an offensive line with two rookies and a first-time starter at center against a Seattle defense that has been the NFL’s best in fewest points allowed (15.9 last season) and fewest yards allowed (267.1 yards per game last season) in 2013 and 2014. The Seahawks are the first team since the 1969-71 Minnesota Vikings to lead the NFL in scoring defense for three consecutive seasons.
3. How will Seattle be able to deal with Rams’ sack demons Robert Quinn and Aaron Donald and a stout front seven?
Don’t overlook the fact that Seattle has two new offensive line starters in left tackle Garry Giliam and center Drew Nowak going up against one of the NFL’s best pass rushes. The attention paid to Rams stars Quinn and Donald helps free each of them up a lot, also creating additional space for more pass rushers and defensive coordinator Gregg Williams’ exotic blitz packages for linebackers and defensive backs. The Rams have sacked Seattle quarterback Russell Wilson 25 times in six games against them.
4. Can the Rams find a way to corral elusive Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson?
Wilson is at his best when he stretches defenses who have to honor his ability (and that of Marshawn Lynch) to run the football. He has a 100-plus yard rushing day against the Rams, but also has two shiny new offensive weapons in all-pro tight end Jimmy Graham and rookie receiver/return man Tyler Lockett. The Rams must keep constant pressure on Wilson, a tough thing to do when the Seahawks backfield also contains one of the NFL’s best running backs in Marshawn Lynch.
5. How will QB Nick Foles look in his Rams debut?
If Foles wants to win over the fan base quickly, he could start by engineering a head-turning upset over the defending NFC champs. However, he’s also playing behind an extremely untested offensive line with three new starters and two rookies. The Rams have two backups at running back and will be working against a proven “Legion of Boom” defense that is still tough despite not having Chancellor. Just keeping a starting quarterback healthy would be a good start for the Rams.
September 12, 2015 at 9:41 pm #30291InvaderRamModeratorgregg williams’ motto. “start fast”. i’m hoping. this defense has to start fast. they should start fast. they should be embarrassed if they don’t.
the leaders on this defense have failed if this defense does not finish top 5.
regardless, it should be a fun season.
September 12, 2015 at 9:48 pm #30292InvaderRamModeratorthe offense on the other hand. i fully expect it to take a long time before we see this offense in full stride. whether that full stride is effective or not remains to be seen.
September 13, 2015 at 1:29 am #30301znModerator7 things to watch: Rams vs. Seahawks
Jim Thomas
BEAST MODE
When it comes to stopping the Seattle offense, the head of the snake remains RB Marshawn Lynch. No NFL player has rushed for more yards or scored more rushing TDs over the past four seasons. And he has been incredibly consistent, with 1,200-plus yards rushing and 10-plus TDs in each of those four seasons. The Rams’ highly regarded defense got off to a slow start a year ago vs. the run, and Lynch provides a formidable opening-day test. Because of his relentless running style, tackling him is not for the faint-hearted.
NEW AT TIGHT END
Seattle has added a dynamic weapon in former New Orleans Pro Bowler Jimmy Graham at tight end. Graham dominates his position like Lynch does at running back. Over the past four seasons, Graham has more catches (355), more receiving yards (4,396), and more TDs (46) than any TE in the league. He does most of his work away from the line of scrimmage, either in the slot or split out wide. He’s tall (6-7) and athletic, so athletic that the NFL banned “dunking” the football over the crossbar — a Graham specialty after scoring.
WILSON WINS
Granted, he gets plenty of help from his defense, but quarterback Russell Wilson has more regular-season (36), postseason (six), and overall (42) victories than any quarterback in NFL history has posted over his first three seasons. He can improvise as well as any QB in the league, scrambling outside the pocket, reversing field, and keeping plays alive. Maintaining integrity in rush lanes and sealing the perimeter are essential for opposing defensive lines. The Rams’ pass rush has had success getting to him, sacking him 26 times in six games.
LEGION OF BOOM
With three-time Pro Bowl safety Kam Chancellor still in the midst of a holdout, and unavailable Sunday, there’s not as much Boom in the Legion. At 6-3, 232, Chancellor is as big as a linebacker, so the Seahawks will miss his hard-hitting ways. Opposing ball carriers and receivers won’t. Meanwhile, the best free safety on the planet, Earl Thomas, isn’t 100 percent healthy following offseason shoulder surgery to repair a torn labrum, but will play Sunday.
LINE DANCING
The Rams’ inexperienced offensive line faces a huge challenge right off the bat against a formidable Seattle defensive front. Cliff Avril and Michael Bennett are accomplished, savvy veterans who can get to the quarterback. Bennett figures to line up most often over Rams rookie RT Rob Havenstein. Defensive tackle Brandon Mebane is a force in the middle. Unlike prior seasons, the Seahawks lack proven depth in their rotation.
CONVERSELY …
After losing C Max Unger and G James Carpenter in the offseason, the Seahawks have one of the NFL’s most inexperienced offensive lines. Not to the degree of the Rams’ O-line, but there are question marks surrounding the unit entering the season. Mizzou product Justin Britt has been switched to left guard from right tackle, and the Seahawks have untested players starting at center and right tackle. The Rams’ defensive front should be able to do some damage on the right side of the Seattle line.
TRICKY RAMS
Rest assured, Seattle’s special teams unit spent extra time this week working on defending every trick play known to man. That’s because the Rams always seem to have their number in this area. Last year, the Rams snookered the ’Hawks on “The Mountaineer,” a play in which Tavon Austin pretended he was fielding a punt on one side of the field only to have Stedman Bailey catch it on the other side of the field and race 90 yards for a score. There was also a completed pass by Johnny Hekker on a fake punt that sealed a 28-26 Rams victory.
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