Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Donald and Suh to blame for poor run defense?
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October 11, 2018 at 6:51 am #92232nittany ramModerator
Seattle OG Fluker on the Rams d-line:
“They haven’t seen a team that’s played physical. They want to be pass rushers. They haven’t seen a team go out there and actually take it to them every single play.”
Donald on how to fix the run defense:
We can’t get out of our gaps.
I wonder if the main issue with the Rams run defense is a tendency for Donald and Suh to abandon their gap responsibilities in an effort to get to the passer? As a result teams are seeing this tendency and are running into the gaps that they voided.
It’s probably not quite that simple but maybe that’s the crux of the problem.
If that’s the case then this should be fixable. Immediately so.
- This topic was modified 6 years, 1 month ago by nittany ram.
October 11, 2018 at 7:36 am #92236PA RamParticipantI think that’s very true.
They are all about upward pressure and they do a good job of that. But they become vulnerable to good running teams.
Marcas Peters constantly watching for interceptions instead of playing his man doesn’t help with the pass defense either.
If they don’t fix those problems this week, Denver will pick them apart.
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick
October 11, 2018 at 8:28 am #92237joemadParticipantMarcas Peters constantly watching for interceptions instead of playing his man doesn’t help with the pass defense either.
In all the years of watching football at the NFL, college, college intramural, high school, jr high flag, sandlot tackle, two hand touch street, Tudor Electric football, TECMO et el, I don’t recall ever seeing consistent blown wide open coverage like last week in Seattle.
Peters was unbelievable…… can Hekker play corner?
October 11, 2018 at 8:35 am #92238wvParticipantMarcas Peters constantly watching for interceptions instead of playing his man doesn’t help with the pass defense either.
In all the years of watching football at the NFL, college, college intramural, high school, jr high flag, sandlot tackle, two hand touch street, Tudor Electric football, TECMO et el, I don’t recall ever seeing consistent blown wide open coverage like last week in Seattle.
Peters was unbelievable…… can Hekker play corner?
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I dunno. I remember the 1971 Rams Tudor Electric Football team and the defense was pretty good. It usually lined up in the 1-2-3-4-1 formation.
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vOctober 11, 2018 at 9:19 am #92241znModeratorI wonder if the main issue with the Rams run defense is a tendency for Donald and Suh to abandon their gap responsibilities in an effort to get to the passer? As a result teams are seeing this tendency and are running into the gaps that they voided.
The one player who has openly stated he himself was doing that, is Brockers.
.http://theramshuddle.com/topic/going-into-week-6-what-are-the-problems-on-d/#post-92151
“Personally for me. I feel like I was just trying to get out there and get to the quarterback or make plays in the back field, stopping the running stuff. Just doing way too much when I could’ve just been doing my job and everything would’ve handled itself.”
So Brockers openly says he himself WAS doing what you say Donald and Suh were doing.
Remember the Dallas game last year? The D was getting pushed all over the field in the first half and then in the 2nd half, that stopped. After the game Barwin came out and said the problem was that in the first half, everyone was free-lancing too much and not playing the D the way it was drawn up.
That has been a tendency of Wade’s Rams D all along. It goes in and out of playing like a disciplined unit.
Right now the Rams YPC on running plays (ranked 29th) (and last year 28th) is the worst it has been since 2011 (when they were also 28th).
October 11, 2018 at 9:54 am #92243nittany ramModeratorThe one player who has openly stated he himself was doing that, is Brockers.
.http://theramshuddle.com/topic/going-into-week-6-what-are-the-problems-on-d/#post-92151
“Personally for me. I feel like I was just trying to get out there and get to the quarterback or make plays in the back field, stopping the running stuff. Just doing way too much when I could’ve just been doing my job and everything would’ve handled itself.”
So Brockers openly says he himself WAS doing what you say Donald and Suh were doing.
Hmmm, well I’ll need to verify the legitimacy of that source.
I’ve never heard of this “LA Times”.
And the name ‘Gary Klein’ sounds made-up to me.
October 11, 2018 at 10:00 am #92244znModeratorHmmm, well I’ll need to verify the legitimacy of that source.
I’ve never heard of this “LA Times”.
And the name ‘Gary Klein’ sounds made-up to me.
Yeah sorry the link takes you to the wrong post. It’s the post before the one the link prefers (ie. it’s the one before the Klein article post).
That post contains IMO the best analysis of what’s wrong with the D we’ve seen yet. Here’s the key line, from VB: “Their fourth-quarter defensive play shows what they are capable of when they lock down on their assignments and play disciplined.”
And…screw the link, here’s the whole post:
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from Rams Q&A recap: Vinny Bonsignore
My personal feeling is Peters isn’t totally healthy, and some of what he usually can do from an athletic standpoint he just isn’t able to do right now. I think he might have to make an adjustment to compensate – which I believe he has to some extent. But if I’m a fan, I remain patient. When it’s all said and done he’s going to be fine
The defensive struggles against the Seahawks, I felt, was related to honoring Russell Wilson and dealing with him and some guys trying to do too much. They got burned in the counter game as a result. Once they started playing more disciplined and focusing on their individual assignments it got better. That said they have to do a better job tackling. They were attacking much too high on runners I felt
They need to play the full game the way they play the fourth. They’ve only given up three points in the fourth quarter over the last three games. Only six all together.
No question the Seahawks were taking advantage of the Rams aggressive rush.
This is what Michael Brockers told me when I asked him basically about that very thing:
“Definitely got to have great assignment on your end because it’s like we have to squeeze a box on him. I said it before you have to kind of collapse on him and if you don’t collapse on him you leave that open and he’ll take advantage of it. His guys do a great job of doing the scramble drill and you know, getting open when he gets to moving around. It’s definitely a strategic way to rush Russell Wilson.”
“Yeah, because we got everything together. We got on the sideline, came together, and just talked about how we needed to improve as a defense and do better for our offense. Our offense did a hell of a job today and we just wanted to step up for those guys most importantly. It’s just about playing defense. Executing the defense, the way we should. Everybody tries to play the game within the game and I think that was a big deal with me today is trying to read what I’ve got and play off of it and stuff like that. As long as we do what we practiced and win our gaps, execute, and just dominate, I think we’ll be fine.”
“Personally for me. I feel like I was just trying to get out there and get to the quarterback or make plays in the back field, stopping the running stuff. Just doing way too much when I could’ve just been doing my job and everything would’ve handled itself.”
Their fourth-quarter defensive play shows what they are capable of when they lock down on their assignments and play disciplined. They just need to get off to better starts
October 11, 2018 at 12:30 pm #92252HramParticipantLot of new faces on defense.
I believe given the coaching, they will continue to learn each other, trust each other, and get better over the next 5 games.
October 11, 2018 at 5:57 pm #92259znModeratorVB: Their fourth-quarter defensive play shows what they are capable of when they lock down on their assignments and play disciplined.
More on this:
Coach Sean McVay’s staff is reminding the defensive front seven to stick with their gap assignments, although McVay identified at least one big Seahawks run in which the coaches put the players in a poor defensive scheme for the situation.
“What we’re encouraged about as you watch it as a staff are they’re very fixable things,” McVay said. “I think our players will respond the right way.”
link: https://www.kentucky.com/sports/article219834435.html#storylink=cpy
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October 11, 2018 at 8:48 pm #92263HerzogParticipantBlown gap assignments does not make Herzog happy
- This reply was modified 6 years, 1 month ago by Herzog.
October 11, 2018 at 10:18 pm #92266znModeratorI wonder if the main issue with the Rams run defense is a tendency for Donald and Suh to abandon their gap responsibilities in an effort to get to the passer?
Well as stuff in this thread shows it’s the front 7 in general. But yeah lack of gap discipline.
We’ll see if that’s the story. It’s simple If it is they will be better just by fixing that. If they’re not better than that’s not the major culprit.
October 12, 2018 at 2:07 am #92279znModeratorWell as stuff in this thread shows it’s the front 7 in general. But yeah lack of gap discipline.
More on this.
With a good link this time.
The Rams believe the issue was more about what they were doing rather than what the Seahawks were doing to them.
“I think our terrible run defense … is primarily due to (ourselves),” Suh said. “You give credit where credit is due. Seattle has great running backs. Minnesota through and through. But at the end of the day, it came down to us not being disciplined and us not making the correct play. Especially when we go back and look at the film. And really all we’ve got to do is go back to the basics. Tackle first and foremost and be where we’re supposed to be.”
“It’s just guys are trying to make plays sometimes,” Donald explained. “You may feel something or see something and jump out of your gap. And they hit it. It happens. It’s a part of football.”
The correction is actually pretty simple.
“Not get out of our gaps,” Donald said. “That’s all it is, little mistakes, things that are gonna get fixed now.”
Added Phillips: “We just tell them, ‘Hey, play the defense called. Don’t play 3-4 (defense) on your own.’ Guys want to make plays. You’ve got to trust the guys on your team. You’ve got to trust the calls and trust the guys on your team. If everybody does their job, then you can do yours better.”
The Rams defense believes it is close to being on the same page more consistently.
Now it just has to show it.This bit is familiar. Added Phillips: “We just tell them, ‘Hey, play the defense called.'”
The exact same stuff came up last year. Last year, the D started the season rough and then suddenly improved in the 2nd half of the Dallas game. A couple of things happened there, like for example moving Brockers to DE. But above all, according to Barwin, it was playing within the defense instead of improvising.
Barwin said almost exactly the same things about that then, that Brockers, Suh, and Donald are saying now:
October 2, 2017
“Everything they did in the first half was exactly what we practiced all week, and everything in the second half was exactly that,” Barwin added. “We came in here [at halftime] and reiterated to just do what we’re coached to do, and do what we thought they would do. Everybody just kind of settled down and played the defense how they’re supposed to.”
October 12, 2018 at 8:31 pm #92303znModeratorI wonder if the main issue with the Rams run defense is a tendency for Donald and Suh to abandon their gap responsibilities in an effort to get to the passer?
This turned out to be a big topic in Ramsdom because the Rams addressed it during the game and then VB took it up as an issue. The whole gap discipline thing.
So, how significant is it? Denver is 3rd in rushing yards and 1st in yards per carry. They’re playing at home against a leaky run defense. In the snow.
If the Rams can make any progress with this kind of thing, now’s the time to start. Otherwise we’re looking at another 2000. This time with a Dream Team defense.
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October 12, 2018 at 9:21 pm #92305InvaderRamModeratorwell why are they abandoning gap responsibilities? and why would they change now? and why didn’t they change before?
are they trying to do too much to cover for deficiencies elsewhere?
i’m not sold yet.
October 12, 2018 at 9:48 pm #92306znModeratori’m not sold yet.
Hi. What are you not sold on? That it was all gap stuff? Or are you not sold that they will fix the gap stuff? (I don’t have an answer, just curious what you are saying.)
I think they didn’t have to address it before because before, the opposing teams were forced to abandon the run. Plus the Vikes can’t run against anyone. Seattle was the one game so far where the other team came out and said we will run at you the whole game and keep it close.
October 12, 2018 at 10:05 pm #92307znModeratorI think they didn’t have to address it before because before, the opposing teams were forced to abandon the run. Plus the Vikes can’t run against anyone.
Just some numbers to hang on that point.
Raiders: 26 carries for 140 yards but they got behind and stopped running Lynch in the 2nd half. Lynch had 11 carries in the game and only 4 in the 2nd half. Raiders ran in the 2nd half 8 times and 3 were when they were down by 20 with under 2 minutes to go.
Cards: 15 carries for 54 yards.
Chargers: 20 carries for 141 yards and only 11 in the 2nd half.
Vikes: 17 carries total for 54 yards and only 3 in the 2nd half. 4 of those 17 runs are by Cousins. But then for the season Minn is 31st in rushing attempts, 31st in rushing yards, and 29th in yards per carry.
Seattle: 32 carries for 190 yards, and none of those are by Wilson. Seattle rushed 17 times in the second half, the most of anyone the Rams have faced.
October 12, 2018 at 10:45 pm #92310InvaderRamModeratorHi. What are you not sold on? That it was all gap stuff? Or are you not sold that they will fix the gap stuff?
i’m not sold that they will actually fix it. i believe them when they say that’s the problem. i’m skeptical that it can be fixed this season.
my guess. and it’s only a guess. is that they are abandoning gaps in order to overcome some other shortcoming. if they stay gap disciplined, who’s to say that the opposing offenses won’t shred them in the air? there’s no outside pass rush, and talib is out. my guess is they will have to concede something either way. and if they come across a more balanced team, it’s just not going to work – as in the playoffs.
i don’t think it can be fixed this season. unless ogbo is just what they need and talib comes back and peters gets healthy. just too many variables at this point.
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