Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › network analysts & others on Gurley (the Gurley-fest thread)
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October 27, 2015 at 2:41 am #33070znModerator
NFL Network: Breaking Down Todd Gurley
Former NFL lineman Brian Baldinger says the Rams rookie running back has “size, speed and vision.”
October 27, 2015 at 2:41 am #33053znModeratorfrom BEST PLAYERS AT EVERY POSITION FOR WEEK 7
Running back: Todd Gurley, Rams (+4.2)
This might not be the last time we see Gurley on this team. He was incredible in forcing 11 missed tackles, looking like the kind of weapon the Rams have desperately needed.
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TODD GURLEY LOOKS LIKE HE’S GOING TO BE A STAR
Rams rookie RB Todd Gurley was PFF’s top-graded running back this week.
https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/10/26/todd-gurley-looks-like-hes-going-to-be-a-star/
Welcome to the Todd Gurley Show. The St Louis Rams selected Gurley with the No. 10 overall pick in the draft despite a significant knee injury he suffered at Georgia that they knew would likely leave him still recovering by opening day. In Week 3 the Rams unleashed Gurley on the league, and since that game they have been intent on seeing a return on their investment.
In three starts he has carried the ball 68 times and gained 435 yards, notching his first two touchdowns this week against the Browns.
His production has been consistently impressive, but the percentage of that production Gurley alone is responsible for has been on the rise each week. Against the Cardinals and Packers Gurley gained between 43 and 48 percent of his yards after contact, but against the Browns a ridiculous 86.7 percent of his yardage came after contact with Cleveland defenders.
In his first two starts combined he broke seven tackles – two against Arizona and then five against Green Bay – but he broke 11 against Cleveland on just 19 carries.
He already leads all rookies in rushing yards and yards after contact and is just four behind San Diego’s Melvin Gordon – the No. 15 overall pick — when it comes to broken tackles.
His 6.0 yards per carry average also leads all rookies (and is tied for second among all running backs), and the 3.5 yards per carry he is averaging after first contact is again the best among rookies, and trailing only Lamar Miller and Le’Veon Bell among all running backs.
The Rams wanted a work-horse running back that they could load up and ride to glory the way Jeff Fisher did to Eddie George back in the day with the Oilers/Titans. Gurley already looks uniquely qualified from this draft class to excel with that kind of responsibility and workload, and we are beginning to see why some saw him as head and shoulders above any other runner in this rookie class.
He was the highest-graded running back in the league this week, and his score was the third-highest figure of the season among running backs.
Gurley is clearly a special talent and the scary thing is, so soon into his comeback, there may be plenty more to come from him.
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October 27, 2015 at 2:44 am #33054znModerator====
STL-CLE GRADES: GURLEY SHOWS VALUE IN RAMS’ WIN
https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/10/26/stl-cle-grades-gurley-shows-value-in-rams-win/
– First-round pick Todd Gurley (+4.7) showed why the Rams where willing to break the trend of not drafting a RB high. Gurley forced 11 missed tackles in the run game, which is the highest amount by any runner on running plays this season. To go along with his missed tackles, Gurley averaged 5.8 yards after contact per attempt, gaining over 100 yards alone after contact.
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against the Browns a ridiculous 86.7 percent of his yardage came after contact with Cleveland defenders.
… he broke 11 [tackles] against Cleveland on just 19 carries.
October 27, 2015 at 11:17 am #33071znModeratorNFL Network: Gurley is One of the NFL’s Top RBs
The NFL Network’s Fantasy Live crew takes a closer look at rookie Todd Gurley and compares him to some of the NFL’s top running backs.
October 27, 2015 at 6:15 pm #33095InvaderRamModeratorhe puts a forearm shiver on a defensive end. just shruggs him off on that 48 yard run. crazy. tremendous lower body strength to break tackles.
another thing. on that 48 yard run. i think most guys barrel forward and try to get whatever they can. and it would have been a good run. gurley has not only the vision but the speed to cut across the field and get maybe another 35 yards. though obviously he gets some big help from tavon on a terrific block as well.
October 27, 2015 at 6:19 pm #33097InvaderRamModeratoralso i’ve read some people question his speed. well his top speed was 21.21 compared to peterson’s 21.89 and bell’s 20.03. i think the speed is there. i think the explosiveness is there. especially on that 15 yard touchdown to ice the game. i think there’s tremendous power there in his lower legs as evidenced by the 100 yards after contact.
???
100 yards after contact. unreal.
i would still be monitoring his carries for the entire season. that’s just me though.
October 28, 2015 at 9:15 am #33127znModeratorPFF: 10 THINGS TO KNOW FROM NFL WEEK 7
https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/10/27/10-things-to-know-from-nfl-week-7/
6. But Todd Gurley was even better against the Browns.
While Miller’s performance was impressive, it stood as second-best to Todd Gurley’s outing in the Edward Jones Dome.
Another first-round pick paying dividends already in 2015, Gurley notched his first two touchdowns against the Browns. He tallied 163 combined yards, 35 coming through the air.
While Miller’s six forced tackles were a feat to be boast about, Gurley forced 11 Browns defenders to miss on Sunday. You read that correctly—11. The Rams’ running back is the only player this season to notch double-digit missed tackles in a single game.
Even more impressive? He did it all on 19 carries.
As Sam Monson said, the Rams wanted a workhorse running back to carry their offense—it looks like they have a winner in Gurley.
October 28, 2015 at 2:35 pm #33136znModeratorNFL Network: Todd Gurley’s Transition to the NFL
Former NFL running back LaDainian Tomlinson on the Rams rookie running back: “the amazing thing is how quickly he has made this transition (to the NFL).”
October 29, 2015 at 8:06 am #33168DakParticipantalso i’ve read some people question his speed. well his top speed was 21.21 compared to peterson’s 21.89 and bell’s 20.03. i think the speed is there. i think the explosiveness is there. especially on that 15 yard touchdown to ice the game. i think there’s tremendous power there in his lower legs as evidenced by the 100 yards after contact.
???
100 yards after contact. unreal.
i would still be monitoring his carries for the entire season. that’s just me though.
You’ve got great footwork, power, explosiveness, instincts and leadership … but you’re not a world-class track star (coming off an ACL rehab) … so, I question your speed.
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October 29, 2015 at 9:44 pm #33192znModeratorCredit the Rams’ O-Line for Gelling in Gurley’s Big Game
Anthony Stalter
http://www.101sports.com/2015/10/06/credit-the-rams-o-line-for-gelling-in-gurleys-big-game/
The Rams’ offensive line has been a lighting rod for criticism since the start of the preseason. Last week in the team’s loss to Pittsburgh, the O-line did its part to suffocate the offense by failing to open up holes in the running game and taking pressure off quarterback Nick Foles.
Some argued that the line held up fine in pass protection, but when defenses shut down a running game they can sit back in coverage in third-and-long and force quarterbacks to make difficult throws in clogged passing windows. Unless we’re talking about the truly elite, QBs can only do so much with no running game and no passing game playmakers.
But something clicked in the desert last Sunday. Suddenly a much maligned offensive line started executing and when you have a back like Gurley, who is capable of breaking tackles and gaining yards after contact, a 5-yard run turns into a 10-yard run.
Or a 52-yard run.
Take that play early in the fourth quarter as example. Out of an Off-set I, the Rams ran a stretch play to their left. At the snap, the offensive line stepped to their left in unison, which is a staple of the new zone-blocking scheme put in place by offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti this spring.
Left guard Jamon Brown and center Tim Barnes executed a perfect double team on Calais Campbell, who winds up being pancaked by Brown. Barnes then slipped off the double team and worked to the second level (another staple of the zone-blocking scheme), where he walled off safety Tony Jefferson (who had lined up in the box for run support).
Also play-side was left tackle Greg Robinson, who put Josh Mauro on skates and wiped him out of the play. Backside, Rodger Saffold blocked down and tossed Ed Stinson like a rag doll, which, along with the work that Barnes, Brown and Robinson put in, created a massive running lane for Gurley.
Gurley did the rest, bursting up field while slipping a tackle and out-running Rashad Johnson before Tyrann Mathieu finally pushed him out of bounds 52 yards later.
Some fans were enraged when the Rams selected Gurley with the 10th overall pick back in April. They asked why, after Zac Stacy showed promise as a rookie, would the Rams draft Gurley when, “they already had running backs on the roster?”
That’s why. That same run may have only netted 12 yards instead of 52 had it been Stacy. Gurley’s combination of size and speed make him special – a playmaker. A difference maker.
But the Rams didn’t receive that type of blocking in the first three games. Even in the win over Seattle, the initial double-team that Brown and Barnes executed was non-existent. Running backs were being met in gaps because the Rams’ O-line wasn’t getting to the second level of the defense. And even when linemen did, they were whiffing on blocks.
That wasn’t Gurley’s only explosive run and that wasn’t the only time the Rams’ offensive linemen executed in the second half. You don’t gain 7.7 yards per carry as a back if you don’t have multiple explosive runs created by your own talents and the ability of your offensive line to create running lanes.
The Arizona game is how teams draw it up. It’s how the Rams envisioned their running game would look back in April.
Now, as with anything else as it pertains to the Rams, we need to see consistency out of the O-line moving forward. It’s time for that group to build off it’s performance in the second half so that the Rams can stay in contention all season.
October 29, 2015 at 11:47 pm #33194znModeratorfrom Gurley is proving he was worth the draft investment
Nate Burleson
I know Todd Gurley has only played in a few games, but you want to talk about explosion? There’s a reason why he was drafted 10th overall by the Rams after coming off an ACL injury. He’s not running like a rookie. He can go sideline to sideline, but when he decides to put either foot in the ground and head north, he does it better than any back in the league. He’s just getting started, and I’m excited to see what he does the rest of the season.
LaDainian Tomlinson
Todd Gurley gets stronger as the game goes on
Right now, it’s Todd Gurley. No one is hotter than him, and he’s only going to get better as he gets healthier. I also like the way he’s running in the fourth quarter, because he’s getting stronger as the game goes on. You’ve got to be in tremendous shape to put up some of your best runs in the fourth quarter. As a running back, you want to be getting stronger late in the game.
Maurice Jones-Drew
Every so often, you get a talent that can be really good in the right system, and that is what’s happening in St. Louis. I don’t think Gurley will hit a wall, because he didn’t play the first two weeks and only had six carries in Week 3, which means he’ll be playing about the same amount of games that one would in college. I just think his speed, vision, football IQ and determination to get things going are all things that are hard to teach. Those things set him apart right now from a lot of other players.
October 30, 2015 at 12:09 am #33202InvaderRamModeratora couple articles (zn: loaded with vids and gifs)
http://nflbreakdowns.com/todd-gurley-outside-zone-trap-cardinals-wk42015/
- This reply was modified 9 years ago by zn.
October 30, 2015 at 12:21 am #33207znModeratorTodd Gurley named October’s top offensive rookie
Josh Alper
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2015/10/29/todd-gurley-named-octobers-top-offensive-rookie/
When the Rams took Todd Gurley in the first round of the draft this year, he became the first player at the position to go in the first round since 2012.
Gurley has snapped another drought for running backs. The NFL named Gurley the league’s top offensive rookie for October, marking the first time that a running back has taken monthly honors since Eddie Lacy in 2013.
Gurley sat out the first two games of the season to make sure all was well after rehabbing a torn ACL and made his debut with nine yards on six carries in the third week of the season. That was not a sign of things to come as Gurley took off when the calendar flipped to October. He had 68 carries, 433 yards and two touchdowns in three games for the Rams this month, which leaves him 12th in the league in rushing and tied with Lamar Miller for second in yards per attempt.
The Rams won two of their three games in October, leaving them with a 3-3 record as they prepare to kick off November with a home game against the 49ers. It’s safe to assume that Gurley will get plenty of work in that game and in the nine to follow for a Rams team that already counts him as their primary offensive weapon.
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