Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › reporters on the SEATTLE game, including tweets n articles n vids
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December 17, 2017 at 8:01 pm #79035znModerator
Brady Henderson
ESPNThe Seahawks began the day with a chance to overtake the Rams the NFC West lead. They ended it with a 42-7 loss, their most lopsided defeat under Pete Carroll. At 8-6, Seattle’s chances of making it back to the playoffs for the sixth straight season are very much in jeopardy
Vincent Bonsignore@DailyNewsVinny
If they lose the next two and the #Seahawks win the next two the #Seahawks have the tiebreakerIt would do to division record, and under #Rams lose next two and #Seahawks win next two scenario, Seahawks will have the better division record.
Since the head-to-head tiebreaker no longer applies it would go to division record. #Rams will be 4-2 in division Seahawks would be 5-1
And if that happens they don’t deserve the division title anyway. Frankly I don’t see the Seahawks beating the Cowboys next week anyway.
Chris Wesseling@ChrisWesseling
This @RamsNFL statement game could have a serious impact on NFL Honors and All Pro ballots:McVay, Coach of the Year
Donald, DPOY
Gurley, MVP
Zuerlein, Cooper, Hekker for All ProJulia Faron @JFaron
The Rams (436) have passed the 1989 Rams’ (426) for the sixth most points scored in franchise history. They trail the 2003 Rams (447) for fifth most points.Goff exits the game with a passer rating of 93.4, which is the highest quarterback rating by a Rams QB at CenturyLink Field. QB Marc Bulger posted a 90.0 rating (11/13/05).
Gurley has 4 TD (3 rushing, 1 receiving) against the Seahawks. Last time the Rams had a player with 4 TDs in a game was RB Steven Jackson (12/31/06) vs. Minnesota. Jackson also had 3 rushing, 1 receiving.
Gurley now has 153 rushing yds & 3 rushing TDs and becomes the 4th RB in Rams history to post 150+ rushing yds & at least 3 rushing TDs in a single game. He joins Eric Dickerson who accomplished it 3x and Marshall Faulk and Steven Jackson who accomplished this feat 1x as a Ram
Gurley is the first Ram to rush for 100-plus yards at CenturyLink. His 144 rushing yards in the first half are the most rushing yards for a Ram in the first half of a game since Marshall Faulk rushed for 183 yards in the first half on 11/11/01 against Carolina.
Gurley’s 144 rushing yards in the first half are the most rushing yards in the first half in the NFL this season.
QB J. Goff (13) has tied Jim Everett (13 in 1990) for the fifth-highest single-season passing touchdown output on the road in franchise history.
K G. Zuerlein (81) has set the franchise record for most total points on the road in a single season, previously held by RB Marshall Faulk who had 78 points on the road in 2000. Zuerlein (20) has tied Jeff Wilkins for most field goals made on the road in a single season.
Donald has 9.0 sacks this season and 37.0 career, which puts him past D’Marco Farr (36.5) for ninth on the Rams all-time career sack list
Rookie WR C. Kupp (798) has passed Bucky Pope (786 in 1964) and Torry Holt (788 in 1999) for second on the Rams all-time rookie receiving list.
Alden Gonzalez@Alden_Gonzalez
The Rams talked about it all week: To be the best, you have to beat the best. They put a firm grip on an NFC West title by dismantling the Seahawks, 42-7, in Seattle, which seems fitting. They’re up two with two to go, so any win or Seahawks loss clinches it for the Rams. Todd Gurley gained 152 yards on the ground and scored four total touchdowns, while Aaron Donald recorded three sacks and two tackles for loss. Amazing how far the Rams have come in 12 months. They’re the class of their division.Rich Hammond@Rich_Hammond
Rams will have to chance to clinch NFC West next week with a win over Tennessee or a Seattle loss to Dallas.This is the worst home loss of the Carroll era for Seattle. They lost 41-7 to NY Giants in his first season (2010).
Rams pick up a safety because sure, why not?
Ryan Kartje@Ryan_Kartje
Ah, let’s harken back to training camp, when Rams fans tweeted at me suggesting the team should trade Donald because of his holdout.The Rams special teams are just insanely good.
Lindsey Thiry@LindseyThiry
You know what’s wild? Aaron Donald has 3 sacks, 4 quarterback hits and is making $1.8 million this season. Next season? I’m guessing he’s getting PAID.Myles Simmons@MylesASimmons
34-0 score is the Rams’ largest road halftime lead in franchise history. That’s 572 games.J.B. Long@JB_Long
Feels like since Week 5 loss, the #LARams whole season has been building to this moment.With us on @ESPNLosAngeles, Andrew Whitworth asked what he’d say to anyone surprised by a 42-7 @RamsNFL road win at Seattle: “I think you haven’t paid attention enough.” #LARams
With us postgame on @ESPNLosAngeles, Sean McVay says @TG3II’s 180-yard, 4-touchdown performances at SEA “shows why I was an idiot” not to give him more last week (vs PHI). #LARams
==
152 rushing yards
3 rushing TDs
1 receiving TDTodd Gurley joins Marshall Faulk (Oct 20, 2002) as the only Rams in franchise history to have 150+ rushing yards, 3+ rushing TDs & a receiving TD in a single game pic.twitter.com/NtjvpNCJSC
— Randall Liu (@RLiuNFL) December 18, 2017
Sean McVay (31yo) will become the youngest head coach to win 10 regular season games since Milan Creigton with the Chicago Cardinals in 1937 (29 years old). #LARams #NFL pic.twitter.com/iwWpK6fQxB
— J.B. Long (@JB_Long) December 18, 2017
My buddy Mitch — statistician for FOX — has a halftime nugget for @RamsNFL fans. #34nothing #LAvsSEA pic.twitter.com/IsKUYpPgVK
— J.B. Long (@JB_Long) December 17, 2017
Aaron Donald’s been waiting a minute for a day like today pic.twitter.com/W8c20p7n8Y
— Vincent Bonsignore (@DailyNewsVinny) December 18, 2017
stan kroenke looks like he's about to go unsolve some mysteries pic.twitter.com/hDQfzHeB9l
— Field Gulls (@FieldGulls) December 17, 2017
December 17, 2017 at 8:18 pm #79038znModeratorSam Farmer@LATimesfarmer
All subject to change, but at this snapshot in time, Rams would be No. 3 seed, playing host to Atlanta in the first round.**To be used for entertainment purposes, not for wagering.
NFL Research@NFLResearch
The #Seahawks 42-7 loss to LAR is their:
• Worst loss of the Pete Carroll era
• Most points allowed (tied) in a game in the Carroll era (Wk 12, 2010 vs KC)
• Worst home loss since Week 1, 1997 (41-3 L vs NYJ)
• Worst loss since Week 16, 2009 (48-10 L at GB)Jimmy Garoppolo has won each of his first 5 NFL starts, making him the first QB to do so since Ben Roethlisberger in 2004
Jason La Canfora@JasonLaCanfora
Garoppolo is the real deal. He’s gonna be very, very rich, very, very soonRich Eisen@richeisen
worst beatdown ever suffered by the @Seahawks at home. Or away. Wow. @RamsNFL mean business.Vincent Bonsignore@DailyNewsVinny
Todd Gurley on emphatic #Rams win: “These guys have been kicking our ass last 10/15 yrs. You have to enjoy & take advantage of the situationDecember 17, 2017 at 9:47 pm #79056znModeratorRams annihilate Seahawks, take control of NFC West
Alden Gonzalez
SEATTLE — The Los Angeles Rams were a broken team on Dec. 15, 2016, the last time they played in Seattle. They were without a head coach and without direction, their season fading to black with uncertainty surrounding both their quarterback and their future.
Sunday, 367 days after an uninspiring defeat from CenturyLink Field on national television, marked the unofficial completion of the Rams’ breathtaking turnaround. Amid gray skies and waning interest, they slayed the mighty Seattle Seahawks with a 42-7 dismantling and all but wrapped up a division title along the way.
Todd Gurley II scored four touchdowns and Aaron Donald recorded three of seven sacks on elusive Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson, who was brought down more often in a single game than he had been all season. The Rams are 10-4 now, an eternity removed from the 10 straight losing seasons they carried into 2017. They lead the Seahawks by two games in the NFC West with only two games remaining, their chances of at least hosting one playoff game now probable.
Todd Gurley ran for three touchdowns and caught a fourth to highlight a dominating Rams performance. AP Photo/Elaine Thompson
Through 14 weeks, the Rams were undoubtedly the best team in their division.On the 15th week, they needed only the first two quarters to prove that definitively.
Before halftime, Gurley rushed for 144 yards — the most by any player in the first half this season — and Donald recorded six pressures. Thanks to their defense, which held the Seahawks to 59 yards on their first 27 plays, and Pharoh Cooper, who picked up 109 yards on his first four punt returns, the Rams began five first-half drives within enemy territory and went into the locker room with a 34-0 lead.
The Rams started the game by forcing an opening-drive turnover for the seventh time this season, using a Tanner McEvoy fumble to set up a field goal. A Seahawks three-and-out led to a second field goal by Greg Zuerlein, who is on pace for a scoring record.
Cooper returned Seattle’s second punt 53 yards to the 1-yard line, paving the way for an easy touchdown run by Gurley. Cooper returned another one 26 yards, sparking a five-play, 36-yard drive that ended in another one-yard run by Gurley.
The Seahawks finally reached Rams territory at the seven-minute mark of the second quarter. But Wilson lost 13 yards on the ensuing play and fumbled the football, setting up another touchdown drive, this one ending in a 1-yard pass from Jared Goff to Robert Woods, who had missed the previous three games with a sprained left shoulder.
After the Seahawks punted for the fifth time of the first half, Gurley sealed it. He took a handoff to the left and zipped past the entire Seahawks defense, sprinting 57 yards untouched for the 16th of his NFL-leading 17 touchdowns this season.
Gurley recorded the first four-touchdown game in the NFL since 2015 with a 14-yard reception in the flat with more than 19 minutes remaining.
By the final seconds of the third quarter, CenturyLink Field — a house of horrors for many an NFL team this decade — was half full and stunningly quiet. By the fourth, the Rams had pulled most of their starters from a game that had quickly become more contentious than competitive.
The Seahawks have made five consecutive trips to the playoffs and have won the NFC West three out of the last four seasons. But the Rams can now clinch a division title with their next win or Seahawks loss. The Rams were 4-12 in 2016 and last in every important offensive category in what became Jeff Fisher’s final year as their head coach. But now they lead the NFL in point differential and sit as the No. 3 seed in their conference.
It took one year for the NFC West to flip on its head.
December 17, 2017 at 9:50 pm #79057znModeratorRams rip Seahawks apart in changing of NFC West guard
SEATTLE – Experience is overrated. Just ask Sean McVay and the Los Angeles Rams.
Much of the 2017 season has served as an expose of such as the first-year head coach and his coaching staff have guided second-year quarterback Jared Goff and a retooled roster on a surprising run toward the playoffs.
Sunday’s 42-7 beatdown over the Seattle Seahawks further drove home the point, and could have signaled a changing of the guard.
The Rams put on a clinic as they improved to 10-4 and took one step closer to clinching both the NFC West and a playoff spot. They scored at will and put up a season-high in rushing yards (244) behind Todd Gurley’s 152 yards and three touchdowns. The Rams defense throttled the Seahawks offense, sacking Russell Wilson seven times and holding the unit to a season-low both in yards (149) and points. The Rams’ defense also ensured that its offense started six of seven first-half possessions in Seahawks territory.
Stunned would best describe the mood at CenturyLink Field, where the home crowd hadn’t seen their Seahawks lose by more than a touchdown since Russell Wilson took over as the starting quarterback in 2012.
“This was just one of those wins where everything was clicking for us and we didn’t want to let up,” Gurley said. “These guys been kicking our ass the last 10, 15 years, so you’ve got to enjoy it and take advantage of the situation.”
This was supposed to be the hotly contested rematch of teams vying for the top spot in the division. In their first meeting of the season, Seattle pulled off a six-point victory in a shootout that saw Goff and the Rams fall short of a crucial late first-down by just six inches while threatening on a potentially game-winning drive.
This Sunday, both teams found themselves coming off of disappointing losses – the Rams to the Eagles, and the Seahawks to the Jaguars – and badly needing rebound performances to help their cases.
L.A. owned the better record, but a Seattle win would have given the Seahawks a two-game head-to-head edge as they clung to hopes of running the table and winning the division.
Typically, the Seahawks fare well in these high-pressure situations, and their familiarity with such seemed to translate into an edge over the upstart Rams.
But experience did nothing for Seattle Sunday. Their battered defense – missing three Pro Bowl players in Richard Sherman, Kam Chancellor and Cliff Avril – offered no resistance, and their offensive line provided Wilson little protection.
Wilson has provided one heroic after another in recent weeks to keep his team in the thick of things. But on Sunday, he proved incapable of willing his team to a competitive level of play, let alone victory.
All season long, McVay has found a way to get his players to respond to adversity and capitalize on prime opportunities. And the 31-year-old did it again this week as he got his team understand the sense of urgency as they traveled to one of the toughest stadiums to play in, and then delivered a smackdown.
The win over Seattle means that the Rams once again avoided losing back-to-back games, as they have all season. They have able to do this because their coach has taught them the art of compartmentalizing, whether after losses or victories, and moving onto the next challenge.
Meanwhile, Pete Carroll – 35 years McVay’s senior and in his eighth season as coach of the Seahawks – couldn’t push the right buttons on Sunday.
This game really could have concluded after one half. The defense swarmed Seattle’s offense so fiercely that the Rams offense repeatedly received prime real estate, starting six of seven first-half possessions in Seahawks territory while rolling to four touchdowns and a pair of field goal.
The first half concluded with the scoreboard reading 34-0 and the home fans booing heavily as the Seahawks headed to the locker room.
Little changed in the second half, which mercifully concluded some 90 minutes later with the stadium only a quarter filled and backup Sean Mannion in for Los Angeles.
The Rams are on the verge of making the playoffs for the first time since 2004.
Meanwhile, the Seahawks are in danger of missing the playoffs for the first time since 2011. Plagued by an aging defense, and with Wilson surrounded by few offensive weapons, this franchise could be bracing for an offseason overhaul.
December 17, 2017 at 9:52 pm #79058znModeratorTodd Gurley and defense lead Rams to blowout of Seattle and brink of NFC West title
RICH HAMMOND
SEATTLE — There’s a new king in the north.
The Rams strutted into CenturyLink Field, a house of horrors for almost a full decade, and decimated the Seattle Seahawks in every phase of the game Sunday afternoon, all but clinching the NFC West title with a 42-7 victory over the Seahawks.
It was a stunning beatdown of a Seattle team that hadn’t lost at home by more than a touchdown since 2011. The Seahawks were weakened by a number of injuries on defense, but still were only two weeks removed from an impressive home victory over Philadelphia. Then they got crushed by the Rams.
Running back Todd Gurley, whose usage had been questioned in recent weeks, ran for 152 yards and three touchdowns and also caught a touchdown pass in the third quarter as the Rams built a 40-0 lead.
The Rams’ defense made things miserable for the Seahawks’ offense, which had only 59 yards at halftime. Defensive lineman Aaron Donald was dominant and recorded three of the Rams’ seven sacks, the Seattle’s offense primarily involved Wilson scrambling for yards on broken plays.
Rams quarterback Jared Goff didn’t have to do much but was efficient, as he completed 14 of 21 attempts for 120 yards, two touchdowns and one interception.
Rams receiver Robert Woods returned from a shoulder injury and caught six passes for 45 yards and one touchdown, and Pharoh Cooper had a stellar game as a returner, with 180 total yards.
The Rams (10-4) now hold a two-game division lead over the Seahawks (8-6) with two games remaining, so the Rams can clinch the division — and, at worst, a first-round home playoff game — with a victory at Tennessee next Sunday or with a Seattle loss to Dallas. The only way the Rams fail to win the division is if they lose their final two games and the Seahawks win their final two.
The first half was a massive beatdown from the Rams, from the start. As has become their habit, they forced a turnover on the opponent’s first drive. On the third play of the game, Wilson completed a pass to Tanner McEvoy but he fumbled and the Rams recovered on the Seattle 40.
The Rams had to settle for a field goal, and kicked another field goal on their next drive, and held only a 6-0 lead even though they dominated the first half of the first quarter.
Then the Rams took off. Pharoh Cooper returned a punt 53 yards to the Seattle 1, and Gurley scored the first of his three first-half touchdowns on the next play to give the Rams a 13-0 lead.
Early in the second quarter, another long Cooper punt return, of 54 yards, gave the Rams the ball at the Seattle 36, and they scored five plays later. Gurley ran it in from one yard out and the Rams held a 20-0 lead midway through the second quarter.
After a Wilson fumble, the Rams took over again inside Seattle territory, at the 39, and scored seven plays later on a 1-yard pass from Goff to Robert Woods.
Finally, after a Seattle punt, the Rams started at the Seattle 47 with under two minutes to play. Carroll actually called a timeout with 37 seconds left, when the Rams probably would have run out of the clock, and on the next play, Gurley ran 57 yards for a touchdown, on a third-and-20 play, to give the Rams a 34-0 halftime lead.
December 17, 2017 at 9:59 pm #79060znModeratorRams Take Control of NFC West, Defeat Seahawks 42-7
Myles Simmons
SEATTLE — It’s never easy to beat the Seahawks in Seattle. The Rams know that as well as any team, having won at CenturyLink Field only once the 2004 season.
But Los Angeles certainly made it look easy on Sunday, as the club beat Seattle 42-7 to take a commanding two-game lead in the NFC West with just two regular-season games to go.
The Rams were dominant throughout the first half, building a 34-0 lead at halftime. Todd Gurley had 144 yards and three rushing touchdowns at halftime — the most yards rushing for any player in the first half this season. Pharoh Cooper had three punt returns of at least 25 yards, each of which set up an offensive touchdown. And the Rams forced and recovered a pair of fumbles, each of which led to points.
L.A. had an average starting field position of the Seattle 42 in the first half, which was a clear factor in building the advantage. In fact, the 34-point margin represented the Rams’ largest road halftime lead in franchise history.
Again — that’s all just in the first half.
The Rams started on defense and picked up their seventh opening-possession takeaway of the year when safety Lamarcus Joyner popped the ball out of wide receiver Tanner McEvoy’s grasp. Middle linebacker Alec Ogletree was there to recover the loose ball, putting L.A. at the opponent’s 40. Kicker Greg Zuerlein nailed his 36-yard field goal attempt to give the Rams a 3-0 lead.
With a strong defensive stand capped by defensive tackle Aaron Donald’s first of three sacks on the day, Seattle’s punt put the Rams at midfield to start their second drive. A false start penalty took Los Angeles out of its groove in the red zone, but Zuerlein hit a 31-yard field goal to give the Rams another three points.
After another strong defensive stand, Cooper barely missed his second return touchdown of the year. John Ryan’s punt went 44 yards to the L.A. 46, and Cooper was tackled inside the one-yard line for a 53-yard punt return. But there was no drama, as Gurley scored his first touchdown of the game with a one-yard touchdown.
L.A. had another chance to score early in the second quarter, but quarterback Jared Goff threw an interception on 4th-and-1. That actually gave Seattle worse field position, and a false start pushed the home team further into its own territory. After what amounted to a three-and-out, Cooper returned a punt 26 yards to the Seattle 36.
A 15-yard pass from Goff to wideout Cooper Kupp put L.A. in the red zone. And Gurley finished the drive with another one-yard touchdown, putting L.A. up 20-0.
The hits kept coming as outside linebacker Robert Quinn recorded a strip sack that defensive lineman Morgan Fox recovered at the Seattle 39. L.A. capitalized on that opportunity with a one-yard touchdown pass from Goff to wideout Robert Woods — who was playing his first game back from a shoulder injury. That score made it 27-0.
The visitors got one more touchdown before halftime, as Gurley took a handoff 57 yards to the endzone on 3rd-and-20 with just 37 seconds left in the period. The running back went untouched for his third touchdown of the half, which brought him to 144 yards on 16 carries — the most rushing yards of any player in the first half in 2017.
Gurley wasn’t done, however, adding his fourth touchdown in the third quarter. L.A. once again started a drive in opponent territory following a Seattle unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. With passes to Woods and wideout Sammy Watkins, the Rams moved into the red zone. And Goff capped it with a 14-yard pass to Gurley. While Zuerlein missed the extra point, the touchdown still gave the Rams a 40-0 lead.
Seattle got on the board later in the third quarter, when Wilson hit tight end Luke Willson with a 26-yard touchdown pass over the middle.
But that was all the Seahawks could muster against the Rams’ starting unit. L.A. inserted Sean Mannion at quarterback with 12:39 left in the fourth quarter. And then the Rams earned two more points when Wilson committed intentional grounding from the end zone for a safety.
With the victory, the Rams are now 10-4 with a two-game lead in the NFC West with just two games to go. L.A. will travel to Tennessee to play the Titans next week with a chance to clinch the NFC West title in the penultimate regular-season game.
December 17, 2017 at 10:14 pm #79061znModeratorfrom Rams at Seahawks Postgame Notes
– The Rams moved to 4-1 against NFC West opponents and are 6-1 on the road, which marks the Rams’ best road record since 2001 when they finished the season undefeated on the road.
– The Rams are 7-4 against NFC opponents this season.
– The Rams’ 42 points is the second-most the Rams have ever scored against Seattle and the most on the road against Seattle.
– The Rams have 235 points on the road this season, which is the fourth-highest output in a single season in franchise history. The 2001 Rams hold the record with 250 points.
– Marks the fourth game this season that the Rams have held an opponent to less than 10 points. This is the fourth time that the Seahawks have been held to seven points or less at CenturyLink Field.
– Goff exited the game early in the fourth quarter with a passer rating of 93.4, which is the highest quarterback rating by a Rams quarterback at CenturyLink Field. QB Marc Bulger posted a 90.0 rating (11/13/05).
– Goff (14) has passed Jim Everett (13 in 1990) for the fifth-highest single-season passing touchdown output on the road in franchise history and tied Everett four fourth (14 in 1992) for fourth. Kurt Warner set the record for most touchdown passes on the road in a single season with 21 in 2001 and he also holds the third place record with 18 in 1999. Jim Everett is second on that list with 19 in 1988.
– Gurley rushed 21 times for 152 yards, a 7.2-yard average and three touchdowns. Gurley caught three passes for 28 yards and one touchdown. In total, Gurley had 24 touches for 180 yards from scrimmage and four touchdowns (three rushing, one receiving).
– Gurley is the first running back in the NFL since Darren McFadden (10/24/10) to record three-plus rushing touchdowns and at least one receiving touchdown in a single game.
– Gurley is the first player to post four overall touchdowns in a single game this season. The last time a player in the NFL posted four touchdowns in a single game was Danny Woodhead (12/20/15).
– Gurley is the first player in Rams history to rush for at least two touchdowns at CenturyLink Field.
– FS Lamarcus Joyner caused Seattle WR Tanner McEvoy to fumble and it was recovered by LB Alec Ogletree. Marks the seventh game this season the Rams have caused a turnover on the opening drive. K Greg Zuerlein converted a 36-yard field goal on the following drive to push the Rams points off turnovers this season to 107.
– DT Aaron Donald sacked Wilson three times, which is a new single game career-high.
– Donald has 11.0 sacks this season and 39.0 career, which puts him past D’Marco Farr (36.5) for ninth on the Rams all-time career sack list
– Sack split by Brockers and Longacre for a loss of four yards. Brockers has 4.5 sacks this season Longacre has 5.5.
– OLB Robert Quinn had two sacks on Wilson. Quinn is tied with former DE Kevin Carter for third in franchise history with 62.5 career-sacks. Former DE Leonard Little holds the franchise record for career-sacks with 87.5.
– The Rams have sacked Seattle QB Russell Wilson seven times, which is tied for the most times in a single game in his career that he has been sacked. The Rams are the only team to accomplish that feat against Wilson, as the also notched 7 sacks on him (10/28/13).
– K G. Zuerlein (81) has set the franchise record for most total points on the road in a single season, previously held by RB Marshall Faulk who had 78 points on the road in 2000. Zuerlein (20) has tied Jeff Wilkins for most field goals made on the road in a single season.
December 17, 2017 at 11:31 pm #79065znModeratorWhat went wrong? Everything. Here are three impressions from the game.
This was billed as the biggest game of the year for the Seahawks, with the NFC West title and their playoff hopes hanging in the balance.
It turned out to be Seattle’s biggest loss of the year, as the Los Angeles Rams thumped them 42-7 to hand the Seahawks their worst loss at home since Week 1 of the 1997 season, when the Jets beat them 41-3. This also marked the first time since 2010 that Seattle has allowed 40 points in a game.
What went wrong? Everything. Here are three impressions from the game.
1. The Seahawks are no longer the kings of the NFC West
With the win, the Los Angeles Rams improved to 10-4, and are all but guaranteed to clinch the NFC West division title.Consequently, the Seahawks dropped to 8-6 and put a significant dent in their playoff hopes – especially with the Saints (10-4) and Panthers (10-4) both winning Sunday. If the Seahawks want to make the playoffs, they now have to win out against Dallas (with tailback Ezekiel Elliott back in the lineup) next week, and Arizona on New Year’s Eve, pray that the Falcons lose to the Bucs on Monday, and hope the Rams stumble in their last two games.
Regardless, Sunday’s game showed that the Rams are now the class of the NFC West. This is a complete football team that doesn’t have any glaring weaknesses. Quarterback Jared Goff has blossomed in his sophomore season, and the Rams have surrounded him with ample talent in tailback Todd Gurley and receivers Robert Woods, Sammy Watkins and Cooper Kupp.
On defense, Aaron Donald, Conor Barwin and Robert Quinn ran over the Seahawks’ offensive line and rendered Russell Wilson ineffective, while cornerback Trumaine Johnson and safeties Nickell Robey-Coleman and rookie John Johnson III held things down on the back end.
2. After weathering injuries all season, this was the game that broke the Seahawks defense
All season long, Seattle’s defense has hung on, pulling together and patching holes despite losing star after star. The Seahawks weathered through losing defensive end Cliff Avril, cornerback Richard Sherman and safety Kam Chancellor to season-ending injuries.But against the Rams Sunday, it became clear that defensively, Seattle finally broke.
K.J. Wright sat out the Rams game due to a concussion sustained last week against Jacksonville, and with middle linebacker Bobby Wagner visibly hampered by the hamstring injury that kept him out of practice this week, Seattle’s defense was no match for a relentless Rams offense led by running back Todd Gurley.
Gurley had his way with the Seattle defense, rushing 30 times for 144 yards and three touchdowns – in the first half.
Perhaps the play that epitomized how badly the Seahawks caved to Los Angeles defensively came at the end of the second quarter, when, on third-and-20 from the 43, Gurley picked his way through the entire Seahawks’ defense for a 57-yard touchdown run that put the Rams up 34-0.
Gurley picked up where he’d left off in the second half, catching a 15-yard touchdown pass from Jared Goff to put the Rams up 40-0 early in the third quarter. Thereafter, with the game in hand, the Rams pulled Gurley and Malcolm Brown got to take his turn running through Seattle’s defense.
3. About all that talk of Seattle’s improved offensive line? Never mind
Seattle’s offensive line has looked a little better in recent weeks since the team acquired Duane Brown in a trade with Houston, and Luke Joeckel rejoined the line at left guard after knee surgery.Seattle allowed two sacks in each of its last two games, and none against San Francisco. But against the Rams, they gave up a season-high seven sacks, with Donald accounting for three, and Quinn for two. The Rams also had nine quarterback hits, with four coming from Donald and two from Barwin.
The Rams’ seven sacks on Wilson are equal to the number of sacks Seattle has given up in its last four games combined.
December 17, 2017 at 11:35 pm #79066znModeratorGurley, Donald dominate as Rams steamroll Seahawks
Chris Wesseling
Riding a career performance from Todd Gurley, the Los Angeles Rams raced out to a 34-0 halftime lead and cruised to a 42-7 dismantling of the Seattle Seahawks in Week 15. Here’s what we learned in Sunday’s crucial NFC West showdown:
1. Los Angeles’ statement game heralds a changing of the guard atop the NFC West. Led by a dynamic Gurley, an unblockable Aaron Donald and a dominant special teams unit, the Rams steamrolled the division end boss, roaring out to the largest halftime road margin in franchise history — and the second-largest such deficit Seattle has ever faced at home. Gurley outgained the Seahawks 158-59 by himself in the first half, calling it a day in the middle of the third quarter with 180 yards from scrimmage and four touchdowns. Barring a faceplant against the Titans and 49ers in the season’s final two weeks, the Rams will take home the NFC West crown for the first time since 2003.
2. The convincing nature of the Rams’ victory will have an impact on the NFL Honors awards as well as All Pro balloting. Overseeing one of the most dramatic transformations in NFL history, Sean McVay should be viewed as the leader in the clubhouse for Coach of the Year accolades. After Russell Wilson praised Donald as the best defensive force in football, the Defensive Player of the Year candidate wrecked Seattle’s offensive line to the tune of three sacks, four QB hits, two more tackles for loss, a forced fumble and countless pressures. A Comeback Player of the Year favorite, NFL touchdown leader (17) Gurley might just enter the MVP discussion as Tom Brady’s competition after watching Carson Wentz and Antonio Brown suffer injuries. On pace to break David Akers’ single-season record for most points by a kicker (166), Greg Zuerlein is in for an All Pro spot. The same can be said for game-breaking return specialist Pharoh Cooper, who bedeviled Seattle’s return coverages for 180 all-purpose yards. As we’ve highlighted several times of late, John Fassel’s special teams unit is a difference-maker entering January.
3. The Seahawks were undone by the same issues that have haunted them all season long: penalties, shaky offensive line play and a slow start for Wilson’s imbalanced offense. After tossing a trio of interceptions in last week’s loss at Jacksonville, Wilson missed key third-down throws early in Sunday’s game as the Rams pulled away. As impressive as his fourth-quarter wizardry has been this season, Wilson’s subpar performances with the playoffs on the line will inevitably undermine his MVP case. To maintain realistic hopes at reaching the NFC tournament, Seattle desperately needs a Tampa Bay upset over Atlanta on Monday night.
December 18, 2017 at 11:15 am #79084znModeratorPETER KING December 18, 2017
THE AWARD SECTION
Todd Gurley, running back, Los Angeles Rams. Four touchdowns and 180 total yards in the penultimate fantasy Sunday for most of America means a fair amount. Doing it against the rival Seahawks, on the road, in a blowout victory, to all but clinch the division and a playoff spot means a lot more. Gurley’s great, and so is his team and coach. Overlook these Rams next month at your peril.
Aaron Donald, defensive tackle, Los Angeles Rams. For the millionth time in this great Seahawks era of football, the offensive line failed to protect Russell Wilson even a little bit. But credit one of the best games of Donald’s starry four-year NFL career. He had three sacks of Wilson, and led the seven-sack dominance of the Seattle offensive front.
What a day for Todd Gurley: four touchdowns, and a continuation of the kind of impact that previous Rams running backs have not made since Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk.
I cannot envision a scenario where I don’t vote for Sean McVay for coach of the year—and that’s even with the crazy-good job done by Doug Marrone.
December 18, 2017 at 4:37 pm #79101wvParticipantI suspect the NFL schedule-makers will now schedule the annual
late-in-the-year-LA-vs-Seattle game…in Los Angeles. For a change.w
vDecember 19, 2017 at 8:46 pm #79174znModeratorDecember 19, 2017 at 9:15 pm #79177znModeratorYou gotta hear this one. I promise.
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December 19, 2017 at 10:30 pm #79181InvaderRamModeratorYou gotta hear this one. I promise.
i said before the game there was no excuse for the rams to lose this game. even playing at seattle.
they were just way too injured to put up any kind of resistance unless the rams just had a collective brain fart the size of la county.
maybe i didn’t expect quite that level of an ass beating. but the rams did what they were supposed to.
December 20, 2017 at 1:45 am #79195ZooeyModeratorQuinn is tied with former DE Kevin Carter for third in franchise history with 62.5 career-sacks. Former DE Leonard Little holds the franchise record for career-sacks with 87.5.
Deacon Jones had 159.5 with the Rams.
December 20, 2017 at 2:20 am #79196znModeratorDeacon Jones had 159.5 with the Rams.
Yeah, official v. unofficial stats.
If you do the unofficial numbers, Youngblood had 151.5, Larry Brooks had 68.5, Coy Bacon had 130 (though not all with the Rams), and Olsen had 94.
December 20, 2017 at 6:59 am #79199nittany ramModeratori said before the game there was no excuse for the rams to lose this game. even playing at seattle.
they were just way too injured to put up any kind of resistance unless the rams just had a collective brain fart the size of la county.
maybe i didn’t expect quite that level of an ass beating. but the rams did what they were supposed to.
I agree that given the injury status of the Seahawks defense, the Rams offense should have had a big day, as they did.
But the way the defense dominated Wilson and the Seahawks offense – that was amazing.
7 of the Seahawks’ 15 drives ended negative net yards. SEVEN.
December 20, 2017 at 9:31 am #79203ZooeyModeratorDeacon Jones had 159.5 with the Rams.
Yeah, official v. unofficial stats.
If you do the unofficial numbers, Youngblood had 151.5, Larry Brooks had 68.5, Coy Bacon had 130 (though not all with the Rams), and Olsen had 94.
Yeah. And I loved Leonard Little. Great player. But…you know. The Rams have had some greats on the DL.
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