media guys & the like on Goff's debut (including PFF)

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  • #59109
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    Dolphins’ pass rush doesn’t fluster Jared Goff in NFL debut

    RYAN KARTJE / STAFF WRITER

    http://www.ocregister.com/articles/goff-736091-rams-fisher.html

    LOS ANGELES – Their goal was to make the rookie squirm.

    With 12 sacks through their month-long winning streak, perhaps no other team in the NFL was more well-equipped to turn up the heat on Jared Goff in his first NFL start. The Rams’ offensive line was struggling, having allowed 10 sacks in their past three games. Goff, after a difficult preseason, wasn’t exactly known for his poise. The Dolphins, according to All-Pro defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh planned to “make his first day in the office very, very, very uncomfortable.”

    And indeed, as the rain came down and the Rams blew a fourth-quarter lead, eventually losing 14-10, there was plenty of discomfort to be felt in the Coliseum on Sunday. Just not from the Rams’ rookie quarterback.

    “We were trying to pressure him, give him different looks, and he didn’t seem bothered by much,” Dolphins coach Adam Gase said. “We were trying to get to him and hit him. He made it difficult for our defense.”

    That isn’t to say Goff’s debut was a masterpiece, by any means. He finished with just 134 passing yards, a completion percentage under 55 percent, and a yards-per-attempt average (4.32) that would have made even Case Keenum shake his head. Most of his passes came out quickly, leaving little time for the Miami defense to get to him. And, on more than a few passes, he missed throws he should have made.

    But, on a few occasions when the pocket collapsed around him, Goff’s poise kept a Rams’ flailing offense alive.

    In the fourth quarter, with the Rams facing a third-and-10 near midfield, the pocket collapsed and Goff was forced to flee, dodging Miami defenders in the backfield before taking off for the sideline. The rookie dove for the first down, and the Rams sideline roared for their new franchise signal-caller. But the play was called back, due to an explicable block in the back from left tackle Greg Robinson, who was 5 yards behind the play.

    It may not have counted. But it impressed Rams coach Jeff Fisher, anyway.

    “If you know Jared,” Fisher said, “your perception is that he’s a gunslinger. You don’t think he has the mobility that he does. Well, he does. He showed that today.”

    That mobility wouldn’t protect him from a handful “welcome-to-the-NFL” licks, though. Just before the half, Goff found himself painfully sandwiched between Suh and fellow Pro Bowl defensive lineman Cameron Wake, 9 yards behind the line of scrimmage.

    “At times, we definitely got back there and hit him,” Suh said. “They didn’t pass the ball as much as we hoped.”

    Actually, the number of pass plays called by offensive coordinator Rob Boras on Sunday (31) fell nearly in line with the Rams’ season average (34). But that second-quarter breakdown would be the only sack Goff took all afternoon – a small miracle for a rookie quarterback, in his debut against a fierce defensive front. The quarterback he replaced, Keenum, took one sack or fewer in just two of his nine games this season. In five games, Keenum took three or more sacks.

    His opposing quarterback, meanwhile, spent most of the afternoon in a perpetual state of discomfort. With a injury-riddled offensive line in front of him and the Rams defensive front smelling blood, Ryan Tannehill was sacked four times and hit on four other plays. But on the game’s final drive, when it mattered most, Tannehill managed to stay upright long enough to move Miami down the field for the winning score.

    Goff assuredly would’ve traded that extra abuse for a victory in his debut. But Fisher was pleased with how upright his quarterback was kept. The few occasions Goff was hit, Fisher turned to ask Boras, who was in radio contact with Goff, if his quarterback was OK. Each time, Fisher got a thumbs up in response.

    It wasn’t a performance deserving of much more effusive praise than that, with plenty of mistakes for the rookie to iron out in the coming weeks. Even Goff admitted after that it took “a couple drives to settle in.”

    But with the likes of Suh, Wake, and the rest of Miami’s strong defensive front focused on making him uncomfortable, Sunday certainly could have been worse for Goff in his debut.

    “There were a lot of things they did, like anyone would do when you’re facing a first-time starting rookie,” Fisher said. “But I thought he handled things very well.”

    #59182
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    Find this article at:
    http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000743790/article/jared-goffs-dream-debut-turns-into-nightmare-rams-loss
    Jared Goff’s dream debut turns into nightmare Rams loss

    By Michael Silver
    NFL Media columnist
    Published: Nov. 21, 2016 at 04:12 a.m.
    Updated: Nov. 21, 2016 at 11:50 a.m.

    LOS ANGELES — She was leaning over a railing atop the wide, well-worn tunnel leading from the L.A. Coliseum’s locker rooms to the corner of the west end zone, waiting for the chance to make a visual connection with her son before he took the field to thunderous applause, when Nancy Goff’s eyes got unmistakably moist.

    Alas, she wasn’t tearing up: The moment Nancy’s son, Jared, had been dreaming about for most of his 22 years was about to arrive, but instead of being awash in sentiment and emotion, she was wiping away raindrops from her seemingly ageless face. It was an act Nancy — whose game-day attire included stylish aviator shades, a long, thin, white sweater and white sandals — would perform over and over throughout a soggy Sunday afternoon in Southern California. Wash, rinse, repeat.

    “It’s just so un-friggin-believable that it’s raining here, today, of all days,” Nancy said as she waited for Jared to appear a few minutes before kickoff, while standing a few yards from her and her family’s seats near the bottom of Section 10. “I mean, how is this happening? I just never thought that when this day came, it would be like this.”

    It was Mother Nature 1, Mother Goff 0 — and by nightfall, she was on the wrong side of a more significant score. After utterly dominating the Miami Dolphins for 53 minutes, the Rams dropped a 14-10 decision in front of 83,483 fans, spoiling the promising but ultimately unfulfilling debut of the No. 1 overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft.

    While Goff’s future may be bright, the Rams’ newly installed quarterback of the present had a mood to match the dreary weather as he stood alone at his locker following Sunday’s stunning defeat.

    “That was just brutal,” Goff told me, slapping his right hand against his knee for emphasis. “We had it. We let it slip away. And the worst part is, we did it to ourselves.”

    He wasn’t lying: With the Rams (4-6) holding a 10-0 lead midway through the fourth quarter and Goff guiding them toward what looked like a potential game-clinching score, it appeared as though this was a heartwarming, made-for-television Tinseltown tale approaching its inevitably cheery ending. Instead, for Goff and the home team, a horror flick ensued.

    Call it Nightmare At Exposition Park.

    “Jared was everything we needed,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said as he stood in the hallway leading to the coaches’ locker room, a few minutes after completing his press conference. “His presence was great. His communication was great. He made reads and checks and got us in the right protections and had command of the run game. He slid in the pocket and he made throws. He was in control, and he knew it — it was no different than the way I was feeling.

    “He didn’t lose it. Had the defense made a stop, we’d be in here smiling, and the story would have been, ‘Jared won the game for us.’ And up until the end, he thought he was gonna win this game, and so did I.”

    Seven months after the Rams selected the former Cal star with the top pick, and five days after Fisher announced that Goff had supplanted placeholder Case Keenum as the starter, there was a palpable sense of excitement in the misty air as fans flocked to this aged stadium steeped in so much history. And nowhere was the anticipation greater than in Parking Lot 1, where a couple dozen of Goff’s family members (including father Jerry and big sister Lauren) and friends tailgated outside an RV, with pulled pork and California microbrews enhancing the festivities.

    “I’m nervous, but I’m also very, very excited,” Nancy said. “The first few weeks, they were doing well, and I think Jared was fine sitting and watching. But the last few weeks, he’s been like, ‘I can’t wait’ — and now, the wait is finally over.”

    Why now? Well, glad you asked. Four games into the season, the Rams — on the strength of a surprising, 17-13 road victory over the Arizona Cardinals — were 3-1, and Fisher felt no compulsion to rush his rookie into action. They then proceeded to lose their next four, with Keenum becoming increasingly unproductive.

    Last Sunday, L.A. slogged out a 9-6 road victory over the New York Jets, marking the second time this season the Rams had managed to win a game without scoring a touchdown. By that point, Fisher was already convinced that the time had come to go with Goff, whose promise had compelled the franchise to swing a blockbuster deal with the Tennessee Titans allowing them to move up 14 spots in the draft.

    “Look, he’s the future of the franchise, and we went up and drafted the kid for a reason,” one Rams source familiar with Fisher’s mindset said before Sunday’s game. “The offense needed a spark, and we’re not totally out of [playoff contention], so we might as well see what he’s got.

    “There’ll probably be some moments where he makes throws that make you go, ‘Wow — I see why he’s the No. 1 pick.’ And there’ll be others where he looks like a rookie making his first start. But the bottom line is, what’s the worst thing that’s gonna happen? We don’t score a touchdown?”

    After the game, during which Goff put up relatively pedestrian numbers (17 of 31, 134 yards, no touchdowns, no interceptions) but was hardly overwhelmed by the moment, Fisher told me, “It was a progression. All the way through [the season], he grew. We saw it every week. And finally, we’d seen enough where I knew it was time.”

    On Tuesday morning, Goff and Keenum were alone in a room watching game film at the team’s temporary training facility in Thousand Oaks, California, when Fisher walked in and abruptly informed them, “I’m going to go with Jared this week,” explaining his reasoning over the next few minutes before departing. The situation could have been abundantly awkward, “but it really wasn’t,” Goff recalled, “because Case has been such a pro about this, and we’ve really been supportive of each other the whole time.”

    Goff spent the next several days grinding as though it were finals week at Cal. “I called him Thursday night to check in,” Goff’s cousin, Kevin Mirchandani, said at the pregame tailgate. “I said, ‘What are you doing?’ He said, ‘I’m alone at the facility, just watching film.’ And that’s pretty much how it was all week. I’m anxious, but I’ve been watching him play since Pop Warner, and I’ve never seen a game be too big for him.”

    Seconds later, as if scripted by a Hollywood screenwriter, it began to rain — and it was impossible not to think back to Goff’s freshman year at Cal, when he had such a miserable outing in a rain-drenched game at Oregon that he was pulled in the first quarter. In the months leading up to the draft, he addressed his can’t throw a wet ball stigma by shining in a private workout for the Rams in a Berkeley downpour and, at the end of his Pro Day throwing session, uncorking a football subjected to some squirts from a Gatorade bottle by Cleveland Browns offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton.

    “This isn’t even really rain,” Jerry Goff said hopefully as he stood in his seat in Section 10, near the southwest corner of the stadium, a few minutes before Sunday’s kickoff. “It shouldn’t make much of a difference to him. When I watched him spin it in pregame warmups, it really calmed me down.”

    As the rainfall steadily increased, however, it became clear that both offenses were affected by the elements. In fairness to Goff, he seemed to handle the wet conditions at least as well as veteran Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill, whose first 11 drives of the game ended with 10 punts and a third-quarter interception (one play after Miami had recovered a fumble by Rams tight end Lance Kendricks, who’d just caught a nice throw over the middle by Goff but subsequently lost his grip).

    The Rams, meanwhile, punctuated their second drive with a 24-yard touchdown run by halfback Todd Gurley, one play after Goff’s crisp slant to receiver Kenny Britt that resulted in a 19-yard gain. Moments like that warmed a mother’s heart — even as Nancy Goff’s sandal-clad feet were subjected to an unanticipated stream of chilliness.

    “We obviously didn’t see the rain coming,” Nancy said during a third-quarter TV timeout. Turning to her daughter, a UCLA graduate student who also spent her undergraduate years at the Westwood campus, she asked, “Lauren — during all the years you’ve lived here, how many days have been like this, where it just rains steadily?”

    “Like today?” Lauren asked, laughing. “Maybe two. I mean, growing up in Northern California, we got days like this all the time, and sometimes I kind of miss them. But it would be great if I could just be curled up on my couch.”

    Said Nancy: “You know what this is? It’s ‘The Goff Luck.’ ”

    The Goff Luck?

    “Obviously, we’ve been very lucky in life, so it’s not literal,” Nancy said. “But sometimes odd things happen, where we go, ‘Is this really happening to us right now?’ and this goes waaay back on Jerry’s side of the family, so it’s something we’ve always kind of laughed about. The rain today is classic Goff Luck.”

    There was some Goff skill on display, too. He showed the propensity for smart, quick decision-making and trademark rapid release that made him such an enticing prospect. He picked up blitzes, uncorked some of the throws (like deep outs) that Keenum had trouble completing and made relatively few mistakes. Goff also slid in the pocket to extend throws and surprisingly did some damage with his feet, rushing four times for 11 yards. In the fourth quarter, he had a crowd-pleasing, 11-yard scamper (on third-and-10) that was called back because of an illegal block by left tackle Greg Robinson.

    After one run, Goff told me later, referee Gene Steratore came up to him and joked, “You keep running around like that, and I’m gonna have to make you quit.”

    Conversely, Goff at times looked like a player making his first career start, sailing some passes and largely failing to stretch the field in the manner his coaches had hoped. He took only one sack, but it was a doozy: On a third-and-4 play in the second quarter, Goff spun in the pocket, seemed to lose his spatial awareness and drifted right into the path of Dolphins defensive end Cameron Wake, who put a hit on the quarterback that loosely translated to, Stay Woke.

    “That was pretty much my ‘Welcome to the NFL moment,’ ” Goff said afterward as he left the stadium, walking about three feet behind the smiling Wake. “I made a bad decision, and he made me pay for it. He crushed me.”

    In the end, however, Goff was still standing — and at least one renowned quarterback guru was impressed.

    “We pressured the s— out of him, and he didn’t look bothered at all,” Dolphins coach Adam Gase told me after exiting his postgame press conference. “I mean, believe me, I had my own problems — but from what I could tell, he handled the moment and executed the plan. It’s a good sign for them.”

    All signs pointed to a Rams victory after they got the ball back at midfield with 11:07 remaining and a 10-0 lead. Goff confidently drove the Rams to the Miami 30, with Britt catching a 6-yard pass on fourth-and-7. Fisher considered going for it but instead sent kicker Greg Zuerlein onto the field, only to watch his 48-yard field-goal attempt hit the left upright.

    Then, suddenly, the rain abated — and Tannehill and the Dolphins awoke, sandwiching a pair of rapid-fire touchdown drives around a three-and-out on which Goff threw underneath to Brian Quick for a six-yard gain on third-and-10. A pair of untimely personal fouls on Rams defenders (linebacker Alec Ogletree and defensive tackle Aaron Donald) didn’t help the home team’s cause, either.

    “I almost wish it had kept raining the whole game,” Goff said. “When it was raining, we didn’t want to put it in the air and take too many chances, and they were kind of approaching it the same way. Then the rain let up and it was like they said, ‘Whoa, maybe we can throw it.’ ”

    Tannehill’s 9-yard touchdown pass to DeVante Parker put Miami ahead by four with 36 seconds remaining, but the Dolphins’ fifth consecutive victory would not be secured until the final play. Benny Cunningham returned the ensuing kickoff to the Rams’ 41, and a pair of Goff completions moved the ball to the Dolphins’ 48 with five seconds to go.

    The young quarterback dropped back one last time, deftly swept to his left to avoid pressure and uncorked a high pass that drifted toward the middle of the end zone.

    “The main thing was, I didn’t want to get sacked,” Goff said. “And when I let it go, I really felt we were gonna get lucky on the Hail Mary.”

    Instead, the Rams got The Goff Luck: The ball sailed toward the waiting hands of Parker — moonlighting as a defensive back in the prevent defense — who deflected it out of the end zone.

    The Rams trudged into the locker room a grumpy bunch, but harboring hope that their young franchise quarterback will build upon an unsatisfying debut and provide some punch to an underwhelming attack.

    “The kid has some s— to him,” one Rams assistant said afterward. “It sucks to lose, but you never really know how it’s gonna go until you throw him in there, and it went well. He definitely has the poise you want in a quarterback.”

    For what it’s worth, one quarterback who knows a bit about the subject — a certain first-ballot Hall of Famer — said he liked what he saw of Goff.

    “Yeah, absolutely,” said Dolphins special advisor to the president/CEO Dan Marino. “He did good.”

    Well, for the most part, he did. Goff’s biggest failure on Sunday, it turns out, may have been his ill-advised wardrobe choices (hey, it runs in the family). The NorCal native walked out of the Coliseum and into the rainy SoCal night wearing jeans and a button-up dress shirt and was summarily soaked by the time he reached the parking lot, where scores of Rams family members were huddled under a white tent.

    “I hate going in there,” Goff said of the family area. Instead, he stood out in the rain until his family members spotted him. When Nancy reached her son, she wrapped him in a robust hug and said, “Jared, you did great. I’m so proud of you.”

    “Thanks, mom,” he said softly.

    This time, her eyes were filled with more than raindrops.

    Follow Michael Silver on Twitter @mikesilver.

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    Reaction to Rams QB Jared Goff’s performance in his NFL debut in Week 11 | FOX NFL SUNDAY

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    Jeff Fisher on Jared Goff’s debut: ‘You could see the light’

    http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/18100632/los-angeles-rams-qb-jared-goff-makes-first-nfl-start

    LOS ANGELES — Jared Goff was a healthy scratch for the regular-season opener, but through hard work, he emerged as the No. 2 quarterback for the Rams behind Case Keenum.

    On Sunday against the Miami Dolphins, the No. 1 overall pick from this year’s draft made his NFL debut.

    While it wasn’t what Rams fans would have liked, with Los Angeles losing a 10-point lead in the final five minutes and falling 14-10 to Miami, coach Jeff Fisher said the rookie ably handled the mechanics of the game.

    “He did a really good job,” Fisher said. “No delay of games. He was in complete control in the huddle. He did a nice job on the line of scrimmage. I was disappointed in the outcome of the game, but you could see the light — there’s light there for him.

    “So we’ll continue to allow him to get ready and continue to progress.”

    Goff finished 17-of-31 for 134 yards with zero touchdown passes and zero interceptions. He was sacked once and finished with a 65.8 passer rating.

    Because of the unusually wet weather at Los Angeles Memorial Stadium, Goff said the Rams played things close to the vest offensively. Goff attempted just five passes of 10 or more yards, failing to complete any of them.

    Goff said getting in and out of the huddle and not having any delay of games was a positive, but something he would like to improve on is to be cleaner on his reads when the Rams hit the road to face the New Orleans Saints next week.

    “I don’t expect us to do anything crazy next week,” Goff said. “We’ll do what we do. Of course we had shots in the plan and stuff that we wanted to do. I was really happy with the playcalling and felt very comfortable out there.”

    Tight end Lance Kendricks said one thing that surprised him was Goff’s ability to create plays outside the pocket. A handful of times Goff escaped the pass rush and either found receivers downfield or ran for extra yards.

    “I honestly didn’t realize that he’s able to get around like he does,” Kendricks said. “I was surprised that he got out of the pocket a couple times. So that’s something we can work on, him being able to scramble and us making plays when he scrambles.”

    Goff said he was nervous early on but got comfortable after the first series. He also looked to Keenum for assistance during the game.

    “Case was great,” Goff said. “I told him before the game that I’m going to need to lean on you. And he gave me good information when I came over there, which helped me out. He told me what the pressures were that they were bringing. He was really helpful.”

    Fisher said the Rams didn’t eliminate anything from the playbook with Goff making his first start but that Los Angeles was limited more by Miami’s aggressive defense.

    “I was really proud of him,” Fisher said. “It’s hard to praise any one of your players in a loss like this, but when all eyes were on our quarterback, I thought he handled this game pretty well.

    “I’m looking forward to him having another real week of preparation. What greater challenge can you imagine being in his shoes than going down and competing against Drew Brees? That’s a huge challenge for a young quarterback.”

    #59273
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    GRADING QB JARED GOFF’S FIRST NFL START
    How did top overall pick Jared Goff fare in his regular-season debut?

    SAM MONSON

    https://www.profootballfocus.com/pro-grading-qb-jared-goffs-first-nfl-start/

    The wait for No. 1 overall pick Jared Goff’s NFL debut is finally over.

    In Week 11 against the Miami Dolphins, the Los Angeles Rams quarterback got the first start of his rookie season, playing all 62 snaps and attempting 31 passes. Goff earned a 50.2 overall game grade, 18th-highest among NFL QBs this week.

    While the Rams ultimately fell to the Dolphins late in the game, what can we make of Goff’s performance?

    The first thing we saw was a game affected by the weather. It was raining in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, and both Goff and Dolphins QB Ryan Tannehill had throws that were clearly affected, making it difficult to fairly evaluate either player compared to typical, dry-weather games.

    Goff famously struggled as an 18-year-old California freshman against Oregon in the pouring rain, fumbling the ball away on two of Cal’s first three possessions before getting benched late in the first quarter. That game was a virtual monsoon of a rain storm, and nothing at the Coliseum yesterday was even close to that deluge, but it was an interesting wrinkle to throw at the rookie, who must surely have been expecting the weather at his first home game—in Los Angeles—to be anything but a factor.

    For those Rams fans hoping to see Goff transform the passing game and breathe life into the offense, it didn’t quite happen that way. Over the course of the game, he only attempted five passes over 10 yards in the air from the line of scrimmage—two of which came in the final three plays, as he tried to mount a forlorn drive to rescue the game—and he didn’t complete any of them.

    Goff put one back-shoulder throw more or less where it was supposed to be early in the game, only to see it broken up by CB Byron Maxwell; by and large, though, this was a game of short, underneath passing.

    It’s not that Goff didn’t want to look deep, but rather that Miami’s defense was bringing plenty of pressure, and the QB didn’t have an endless amount of time to sit in the pocket and survey the field.

    Even with a few plays where he held the ball too long, Goff’s average time to throw was 2.26 seconds, the fourth-fastest time in the league this week. 67.6 percent of the passes he attempted were out in 2.5 seconds or less, again the fourth-highest rate in the league, and his average depth of target was 8.1 yards down field, tied for 18th—one spot above Chiefs QB Alex Smith.

    Despite that quick passing offense, Goff was still under pressure on 15 of his 34 dropbacks, and on many of those throws, was inaccurate, though it is difficult to judge how much of that was impacted by the slick conditions.

    When kept clean, Goff completed 66.7 percent of his passes, though for just 4.7 yards per attempt, and had a passer rating of 77.3; when he was pressured, those numbers all crashed. He completed just 38.5 percent of passes under pressure, for almost a full yard less per attempt (3.8) and a passer rating of 49.8.

    Jared Goff vs pressure

    Overall, Goff didn’t make any catastrophic mistakes like the ones that punctuated his preseason performance, which will be encouraging for those looking to see if he was mentally ready for the big stage, having been kept on the bench for so long. He wasn’t working through his progression much, but he didn’t often have the kind of time to get that done. Crucially, though, he wasn’t completely misreading plays, outside of one pass early on that looked like he took the wrong option on a slant/flat combination route to one side of the field.

    Goff’s biggest issue in this game was simple inaccuracy. He overthrew his receivers four times, under-threw them once, and missed laterally twice. While Goff was under pressure plenty in college, he was typically pretty accurate even when under duress. Last season, even when hurried, Goff was accurate on 64.7 percent of his passes, good enough for top 10 in the nation, so it seems unlikely that ability would desert him as a pro.

    If Goff’s accuracy was significantly affected by the rain, then we’ll get a far better idea of what he can do in a week’s time when the Rams take on the Saints. New Orleans plays in a dome, and also doesn’t have anything like the pass-rush that Miami fields weekly.

    Goff’s first NFL action wasn’t exactly a let-down, nor does he look likely to provide any kind of spark to the L.A. offense this season. He is a QB still very much being eased into action, and had his work made even more difficult in Week 11 by playing in the rain.

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