Rams have some added motivation in game against Saints

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    Rams have some added motivation in game against Saints

    VINCENT BONSIGNORE

    link: http://www.ocregister.com/2017/11/25/rams-have-some-added-motivation-in-game-against-saints/

    The distance the Rams have created between their past and present is sufficient enough to render most of the pain and misery of previous seasons obsolete.

    Situated in the thick of an exhilarating division championship and playoff chase, a remade franchise focused on an enviable present and bright future, it’s almost detrimental to peek back on wretched memories.

    Almost.

    Some things are better served holding onto, though. To be recalled at just the right time, for just the right reasons.

    Like, say, the sting, anger and embarrassment of being the collateral damage of a vendetta being carried out between an opposing head coach and his former colleague. And the motivation those feelings will provide Sunday at the Coliseum when the Rams host the New Orleans Saints in a critical showdown between two of the best teams in the NFC.

    The Rams have plenty of incentive as it is to win the game.

    With the Seahawks nipping at their heels, a victory ensures at least a one-game lead over Seattle in the NFC West. Coming off a loss to the first-place Vikings in Minnesota last week, the Rams can’t afford another confidence-eroding loss against a fellow NFC power. And with the postseason a very real possibility, every win from here on out will assist in getting at least one home playoff game.

    But there are even deeper, more personal motivations at play as well.

    Like the marker they need to collect from Saints head coach Sean Payton for the way he stuck it to former Rams defensive coordinator Gregg Williams — who served the same role under Payton from 2009-11 — by running up the score in a 49-21 win over the Rams last year.

    It was a humiliating loss to say the least.

    “All I remember was I wasn’t playing in the fourth quarter because we were getting beat so bad,” remembers Rams running back Todd Gurley. “So that’s not a good thing.”

    But even more so knowing the backstory between Payton and Williams, and how the Rams were unwilling participants in the contentious beef between the two former colleagues.

    That is, unless you believed Payton’s explanation for dialing up fourth-quarter trick play with the Saints already holding a 42-21 lead as: “(it) just came up at the right time.”

    Considering Payton was laughing on the sideline when the gratuitous double-pass trick play went for a 50-yard touchdown, everyone from New Orleans to Los Angeles knew what was really going on. This was all about Payton’s disdain for Williams, his former assistant. Williams, you’ll remember, was a central figure in the Saints’ infamous “Bountygate” scandal in which defensive players were being paid slush money for everything from downing a punt inside the 10-yard-line to knocking opposing players out of the game. Williams’ role in the illegal activity eventually cost him his job with the Saints, an indefinite suspension and whatever relationship he had left with Payton, who served his own one-year suspension for his part in the drama.

    It was well known in New Orleans that Williams and Payton were never on good terms to begin with. The messy breakup only exasperated their ill-will for each other.

    All of which made the trick play Payton called, his joy in its success and the delight he got in running up the score on Williams and the Rams so personally satisfying.

    Albeit painfully obvious to the Rams.

    “Obviously, we had Williams there and Payton was trying to get after him,” Gurley remembered.

    That it came at the Rams expense was immaterial. They were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. And considering their ineptness last season, incredibly powerless to do anything about it.

    So sit there and take it they did.

    Afterward, a few of the prouder Rams promised to remember the feeling of getting caught in the crossfire of the beef between Payton and Williams. And the fury they felt in the pleasure it resulted in on the opposing sideline.

    Paths will eventually cross again, they insisted. And a day was bound to arrive in which they were sufficiently equipped to exact their revenge.

    Don’t look now, but that day is upon us.

    The transformed Rams welcome Payton and the Saints to the Coliseum on Sunday armed with the second-best scoring offense in the NFL, playoff aspirations and a growing confidence level.

    And while they won’t blatantly talk about it, you get the sense there’s a debt out there that needs to be collected. If the opportunity presents itself, a little bit of payback is in order.

    “That’s always been my philosophy is let’s run the score up,” Gurley said. “I feel like that now. We’ve got a high-powered offense it’s like, ‘Hey, we’ve been getting our tails kicked the last 10 years, so let’s do the opposite now.”

    There’s a million reasons why the Rams want to win on Sunday.

    But some are just a little more personal than others.

    #77936
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    Rams looking to avenge embarrassing loss to Saints

    Alden Gonzalez

    http://www.espn.com/blog/los-angeles-rams/post/_/id/36568/rams-looking-to-avenge-embarrassing-loss-to-saints

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — It was an embarrassment, and then it became even worse.

    The New Orleans Saints hosted the Los Angeles Rams at Mercedes-Benz Superdome in Week 12 of the 2016 season and led by three touchdowns in the final quarter. With just a shade over 10 minutes remaining, Drew Brees threw to wide receiver Willie Snead, who then fired downfield to running back Tim Hightower, adding another touchdown on a 50-yard flea-flicker.

    As Rams cornerback Trumaine Johnson put it, “They were looking for blood.”

    Saints head coach and offensive playcaller Sean Payton was matching up against former Rams defensive coordinator Gregg Williams, who worked under him during the infamous bounty scandal. And it was clear that Payton wanted to send a message, even if it meant running up the score in a game that was already getting out of hand.

    “It’s still in the back of my head,” Johnson said. “It’s going to be a good matchup.”

    The Rams and Saints will look completely different when they meet at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Week 12 of 2017, for a game that will take place one day shy of a year from last season’s blowout. The Saints, winners of eight straight after an 0-2 start, finally have a stout defense and a strong running game to complement Brees. The Rams, 7-3 for the first time since the 2003 season, have experienced an offensive awakening under first-year head coach Sean McVay.

    The turnaround is so drastic that it has somewhat altered Todd Gurley’s perspective on that trick play the Saints ran against his defense last season.

    “If you don’t want nobody to score, then stop them,” said Gurley, the NFL’s leader in scrimmage yards. “That’s always been my philosophy is, ‘Let’s run the score up.’ I feel like that now. We’ve got a high-powered offense. It’s like, ‘Hey, we’ve been getting our tails kicked the last 10 years, so let’s do the opposite now.'”

    The Rams will try to do so without leading receiver Robert Woods, who will miss at least the next two games because of a sprained left shoulder. But the Saints will be without their two starting cornerbacks, Marshon Lattimore and Ken Crawley.

    The Rams’ defensive players spent a lot of this week offering effusive praise of Brees, a 10-time Pro Bowler and future Hall of Famer. But they also understand the importance of stopping Mark Ingram and Alvin Kamara, who have made the Saints the NFL’s most efficient running team. The Rams’ defense ranks fifth in DVOA (defense-adjusted value over average), but only four teams have given up more rushing yards this season.

    The Saints are on pace to become the first team since the 2000 Denver Broncos to finish within the top three in rushing yards and passing yards, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

    “They’ve got the best running game they’ve had since they won the Super Bowl, and I think that’s the real key,” said Rams defensive coordinator Wade Phillips, who was with Brees on the then-San Diego Chargers from 2004-05. “They’re really powerful offensively now. They can run the ball and win or they can throw the ball and win. Before, it was all on [Brees]. This year’s team is different. It’s a big challenge for us.”

    The Rams and Saints are second and third in points per game, respectively, and Sunday will mark the fourth time since the 1970 merger that two teams averaging at least 30 points will play each other this late in the season, according to research from the Elias Sports Bureau.

    The Rams are coming off a 24-7 loss to the Minnesota Vikings. But they still hold a one-game lead over the division-rival Seattle Seahawks in the NFC West and are three games better than they were at this point last season, which feels like an eternity ago. The Rams blew a two-score lead late against the Miami Dolphins in Week 11 of the 2016 season, spoiling an opportunity to get to .500 during Jared Goff’s debut.

    Their loss to the Saints marked the beginning of a six-game stretch when they were outscored by a combined 132 points, a span that culminated in Jeff Fisher’s firing as head coach.

    Payton’s flea-flicker was salt in the wound, but Rams defensive players claimed to not take it personally.

    “If I was the head coach,” Rams outside linebacker Robert Quinn said, “I’d probably do the same thing.”

    Added inside linebacker Alec Ogletree: “I’m all for scoring as many points as you can. You can’t be mad. You’re out there to stop them. They ran a flea-flicker, they were up. A lot of teams aren’t going to do that, but it is what it is. It’s our job to stop them from doing it.”

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