a Donald thread (from 10/19 to…

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  • #92563
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    from NFL Scouts, Coaches and Executives Rank the Top 10 Players in the NFL

    https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2801157-nfl-scouts-coaches-and-executives-rank-the-top-10-players-in-the-nfl#slide0

    Who are the 10 best players in the NFL today?

    That’s a text we sent to 12 longtime NFL scouts, coaches and general managers as the NFL season nears its midpoint.

    That question alone is tough to answer. You almost need context to define what “best” means. Are the best players those with the most talent or the players dominating statistically? To be one of the 10 best players, do you have to have both talent and production?

    Ultimately, that was up to the 12 men responding. What does best mean to them and who ranks in the top 10 players right now?

    Here are the results.

    6. Aaron Donald

    Scout’s Take: “He started slow, but in the last month no one has been better than Aaron Donald.”

    Every evaluator we talked to ranked Donald as a top-10 player, and his play in the last three games (four sacks in that time) backs it up—Donald is a top-tier player and arguably the league’s best defender.

    Rushing from the interior of the Rams defense, Donald has lived up to his paycheck as the league’s top-paid defensive tackle. It’s no coincidence that Donald’s ability has helped lead the Rams to the NFL’s only remaining undefeated record.

    “What he’s doing from the middle is unlike anything I’ve seen. He might be the most talented player in the game,” said a rival coach. Donald’s play and ranking seem to agree.

    #92717
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    Agamemnon

    #92721
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    #92728
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    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Just asked @DMarcoFarr1, who’s seen every play of @AaronDonald97’s career, if that strip of Breida would make his Top 3.
    No hesitation: YES.
    Unreal.

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Today, @AaronDonald97 became the first interior defensive lineman in #NFL history to record 8+ sacks in each of his first 5 seasons.

    (Full disclosure Part 1: He was the first to do so in his first 4 seasons. This is just tacking on.)

    (Full disclosure Part 2: It’s October.)

    Myles Simmons@MylesASimmons
    Donald: this is as dominant a game as I’ve ever seen from an interior defensive lineman.

    ==

    from: https://lastwordonprofootball.com/2018/10/21/reflections-on-san-francisco-49ers-week-seven-loss-to-l-a-rams/

    49ers Offensive Line Overwhelmed by Rams Pass Rush

    Beathard is prone to turnovers even when he’s not getting destroyed by the opposing pass rush, so it’s a recipe for disaster when a team is able to torment him as much as the Rams front seven did this game. The Rams sacked him seven times. Aaron Donald had four of those sacks, Cory Littleton had two, and Samson Ebukam had the other. Ebukam delivered a huge hit to Beathard from behind in the first quarter, deflecting the ball into the air that eventually got caught by Trevon Young.

    It looked originally like it might be ruled as an interception, but it was ruled a fumble instead. Regardless, it was a costly turnover.

    Not only did Littleton have two sacks, but he also caused a safety when he blocked a punt that rolled out the back of the end zone early in the second quarter. There were actually two blocked punts in this game, the second of which came in the fourth quarter when Mark Nzeocha blocked the Rams punt.

    By that time the game was out of reach, though, as Jared Goff had been taken out of the game and replaced by Sean Mannion.

    The Rams were basically content to run the clock out at that point, as Mannion didn’t attempt any passes in this appearance.

    The Littleton sack in the first quarter knocked the 49ers out of field goal range, illustrating the importance that a good pass rush can have on the final outcome of a game. Those three points didn’t matter in this specific game, but plays like that can often be the difference between a win and a loss.

    Donald really showed why he’s the reigning Defensive Player of the Year and one of the scariest defensive weapons in the NFL. Donald not only sacked Beathard four times but had an incredible strip fumble on Breida in the first quarter that he also recovered.

    It’s hard to accurately assess blame on the 49ers side for Beathard being sacked this often. Sometimes Beathard held onto the ball too long, and other times the offensive line just looked overwhelmed by an elite pass rush.

    ==

    ==

    #92731
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    #92736
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    #92806
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    #92809
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    PARAM

    In 7 games Donald has almost equaled his rookie performance, which was good enough to earn him DROY.

    2014: 9 sacks, 18 TFL, 13 QBHits
    2018: 8 sacks, 10 TFL, 13 QBHits

    And while looking at DROY’s, we now have 3 of them on the roster…..Donald, Peters and Suh.

    He’s already earning his money.

    #92814
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Donald seems to be the one guy there that can outperform his mega-contract.

    Agamemnon

    #92886
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    #92889
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
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    Aaron Donald has totaled a league-high 47 total pressures through Week 7, the second-highest total for any defensive player in Weeks 1-7 in the PFF era (2006-Present).

    Only Tamba Hali and his 54 pressures in 2013 rank ahead of Donald.

    The dude’s a freak of nature.

    and you know what’s really impressive about this stat?

    the fact that he’s doing it at a time when the league is putting every freaking roadblock it can think of to slow down defensive players.

    i mean just think about it. gurley and goff are putting up unreal numbers. but you expect numbers across the league to be going up in terms of offense.

    donald is being handcuffed, and he’s still dominating. transcendent i tell ya. freaking transcendent.

    #92893
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    and you know what’s really impressive about this stat?

    the fact that he’s doing it at a time when the league is putting every freaking roadblock it can think of to slow down defensive players.

    i mean just think about it. gurley and goff are putting up unreal numbers. but you expect numbers across the league to be going up in terms of offense.

    donald is being handcuffed, and he’s still dominating. transcendent i tell ya. freaking transcendent.

    All true. And on top of it,

    #1 he was off to a slow start after missing camp

    and

    #2 Hali, who ranks first, is an edge rusher who doesn’t start at the snap surrounded by blockers

    I wish they had put up the nearest DT who did anything close to that

    #92895
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    Hali, who ranks first, is an edge rusher who doesn’t start at the snap surrounded by blockers

    I wish they had put up the nearest DT who did anything close to that

    yeah. he always seems to be fighting through multiple blockers.

    he’s like wolverine. he’s short and stubby. but powerful and quick. hard for blockers to get their hands on him and slow him down.

    #92900
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    #92915
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    Rams’ Aaron Donald on pace for record number of sacks for a defensive tackle

    RICH HAMMOND

    link: https://www.dailynews.com/2018/10/26/rams-aaron-donald-on-pace-for-record-number-of-sacks-for-a-defensive-tackle/

    THOUSAND OAKS – Fruits, vegetables and Aaron Donald sacks come in bunches. Only the latter is not conducive to a healthy lifestyle, and Donald is consuming opposing quarterbacks at a record pace.

    After a slow start, at least in a statistical sense, Donald recorded a career-high four sacks in last week’s victory over San Francisco. Based on a per-game average, he’s on pace to record the most career sacks by a defensive tackle in NFL history, and he’s playing even better than last year, when he was Defensive Player of the Year.

    So it will be the Battle of the Aarons at the Coliseum on Sunday – Donald vs. Rodgers – and Aaron Rodgers, the Packers’ veteran quarterback, is well aware of how quickly Donald can ruin an offense’s day.

    “He’s a menace inside,” Packers quarterback Rodgers told reporters in Green Bay this week. “You’ve got to try to find a way to get bodies on him and slow him down with different looks.”

    Best of luck, the Rams’ recent opponents would say. Donald, who missed all of training camp and the preseason during negotiations for the new contract he signed in late August, failed to record a sack in his first three games this season but now has eight sacks in his last four games.

    Eight sacks ties Donald for the NFL league lead with Minnesota defensive end Danielle Hunter, and that’s the thing. Donald is unparalleled as a pass-rushing defensive tackle, certainly in the last 15 years.

    “He’s relentless, is one of the best ways that you can put it,” Rams coach Sean McVay said. “When you go back and you just tally up all the plays that he’s made, and how he’s getting there and affecting and influencing the game in a variety of ways from his position, it’s really impressive. That’s why he’s the man.”

    That’s because it’s not just about sacks. The analytics website Pro Football Focus this week noted that Donald has totaled 47 quarterback pressures this season. The site said that’s the second-most most for any player during the first seven weeks of a season since at least 2006.

    In his career, Donald has recorded 47.0 sacks in 69 regular-season games. That’s an average of 0.68 sacks per game. John Randle, who holds the NFL record for sacks by a defensive tackle, with 137.5, averaged 0.63 sacks per game during his Hall of Fame career with Minnesota (1990-2000) and Seattle (2001-03).

    Randle set his sack mark in 219 games, and it won’t be easy to pass. Even if Donald maintained his sack pace and didn’t miss a game – neither of which seems highly probable – he wouldn’t pass Randle’s mark until the final game of the 2026 season, when Donald would be 35 years old.

    Then there’s Alan Page, the Hall of Fame tackle who played from 1967-78, when the NFL didn’t keep sacks as official stats. Estimates from film have given Page 148.5 sacks, which would top Randle’s mark for a tackle.

    None of this is exact science. Randle sometimes played defensive end, and even Donald moves around a lot in the Rams’ 3-4 scheme. If nothing else, Donald certainly is on pace to top this century’s best pass-rushing tackle, Warren Sapp, who had 96.5 sacks in 198 career regular-season games.

    The short-term question is whether Donald can be the first tackle to lead the NFL in sacks since La’Roi Glover recorded a league-high 17 with New Orleans in 2000. Since 1982, when sacks started to be recorded, only Glover and Randle (in 1997) have led the league in sacks as defensive tackles.

    Donald’s career high is 11 sacks, which he recorded last season and as a second-year player in 2015. He’s already within three of that mark, with nine games to go, and that number steeply increased last week.

    Donald dominated the 49ers with four sacks, one other tackle for loss and a forced fumble, which he also recovered after he yanked the ball out of the hands of running back Matt Breida.

    “You don’t see those kind of games very often by a defensive player who dominates a game like that,” Rams defensive coordinator Wade Phillips said. “I’ve been very lucky to be around some great ones, and they’ve done it every once in a while, and it’s a tremendous accomplishment and obviously helps your team so much. It lifts your team when he’s making all kinds of plays like that.”

    #92938
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    from PFF–Trending Up: Looking at PFF’s highest-graded defensive players in Weeks 4-7

    https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/pro-trending-up-looking-at-pffs-highest-graded-defensive-players-in-weeks-4-7

    AARON DONALD, DI, LOS ANGELES RAMS
    95.4 overall grade
    Through the first three weeks of the season, Donald had only a 92.1 overall grade. While it doesn’t represent a huge leap number wise, his play over the last four weeks has been inspired. Over that span, he’s had the three highest single-game grades of any interior defensive lineman this season, and his 32 combined pressures in his last four games are six clear of the next best player in the NFL, regardless of position. The Rams defensive tackle is doing things we’ve never seen done from a purely interior role.

    #93052
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    Why Donald is the defensive MVP so far | Baldy’s Breakdowns

    https://in.news.yahoo.com/why-donald-defensive-mvp-far-194350215.html

    #93056
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    #93151
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Agamemnon

    #93155
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
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    This is outrageous, via NFL Next Gen Stats… Not only is Aaron Donald leading the league in sacks (10), he’s doing it while being double-teamed 70% of the time… practically twice as often as the other leaders.

    that’s insane. still. that tells me he needs some help. someone to draw those double teams away. or at least someone to make offenses pay for double teaming him that often.

    #93162
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    Zoltán Buday@PFF_Zoltan
    Yes, Aaron Donald leads the NFL with 10 sacks, but what’s even crazier is that 7 of those have come within 2.5 seconds from the snap, no other player has more than 4 such sacks.

    #93166
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    7 of those have come within 2.5 seconds from the snap

    he’s amazing.

    #93181
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    he’s amazing.

    There’s more.

    What we’re seeing I think is historic.

    ===

    ==

    from PFF: https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/pro-ranking-the-nflstop-defenses-after-week-8

    While they have earned the fifth most pressures of any defense in the NFL, over a third of them have come from Aaron Donald alone. The defensive tackle is playing the best football of his entire career and his 28.4 percent win rate as a pass-rusher would be the highest we’ve seen from any player – interior or edge – for a single season.

    #93271
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    https://www.sbnation.com/nfl/2018/11/1/18044124/aaron-donald-los-angeles-rams-defense-ty-montgomery

    aron Donald is the real reason Aaron Rodgers never got a chance at a comeback
    What Donald did to Aaron Rodgers last week is a big reason the Rams are still undefeated. Retired NFL defensive end Stephen White breaks it down.
    By Stephen White Nov 1, 2018, 12:20pm EDT

    Last week against the San Francisco 49ers, Aaron Donald had one of those all-time great games that that rarely come along for even the best defensive linemen. It wasn’t exactly hard to understand how he earned Hoss Of The Week. Four sacks aside, Donald’s stat line was still pretty spectacular: two other tackles for a loss, a caused fumble, and a fumble recovery.

    However, if we are keeping it a buck, while it was an outstanding game, the 49ers are not exactly world beaters. That game was also well out of hand by the time the fourth quarter rolled around, which meant there wasn’t a lot of pressure on Donald to come up with game-deciding plays, even as he continued to make them.

    His stat line from this past Sunday wasn’t quite as gaudy, but his actual performance tells a whole other story, especially true when you factor in the Packers being a much more dangerous opponent than the 49ers and Aaron Rodgers being one of the scariest quarterbacks in NFL history, completely healthy or not.

    Donald’s play against Green Bay might have been even more impressive than the San Francisco game if you put a little extra value on plays made on third down and/or late in a close game.

    I could go back and sing all of Donald’s praises again before digging into the devastation that he unleashed on Rodgers and the Packers on Sunday, but hell, I did that already last week and ain’t nothing changed. So, I’m just going to dive right into some of his aforementioned third-down stops to illustrate just how much of an impact Donald had on the outcome of the game in Week 8.

    Donald had a big first half that announcers didn’t even notice

    I would assume some regular folks might not have noticed how well Donald played in the first half since the announcers overlooked a few of his plays themselves.

    Well, one of them at least.

    Early in the third quarter, one announcer commented that they hadn’t called Donald’s name all game. The statement was wrong on its face. Donald had already made quite an impact in the first half, even if that announcer some how hadn’t noticed.

    For instance, Donald had a third-down pressure relatively early on in the second quarter that forced Rodgers into an incompletion. That incompletion also led to the Packers’ first punt of the game after their offense came out lighting the up Rams. In fact, Green Bay was already up 10-0 at that point.

    Donald was lined up as the right three-technique, across from left guard Lane Taylor. On the snap, Donald came off the ball and exploded into Taylor’s chest and drove him inside with a bull rush. Ironically, Donald did such a good job that when the running back, Ty Montgomery, checked through the B gap to try to chip on him, he completely missed Donald because he had smushed Taylor all the way down into the A gap.

    Once Donald felt Montgomery continue out into his route and the coast was clear, he abruptly stuck his inside foot in the ground to change directions back outside. He used his outside hand to grab Taylor’s outside arm and forklift him up in the air by his wrist. Because he’d already driven Taylor so far inside, by the time Donald redirected and came off the block back outside, he was in prime position right in front of Rodgers.

    If he had just one more second, Rodgers would have had the opportunity to try a throw to Geronimo Allison, who was coming relatively wide open across the field on a dig route behind Jimmy Graham’s skinny post from the slot. And that pass would have had a chance to gain the 7 yards they needed to gain for a first down.

    Instead, with Donald bearing down on him, all Rodgers could do was try to throw a ball up for grabs to Graham who was double covered running down middle of the field. Graham wasn’t able to haul it in, but, hey, at least the hurried throw wasn’t intercepted, shrug emoji. One thing’s for sure, and that’s Donald affected the hell out of that play and his pressure helped force the Packers to punt on the next play after scoring on their first two drives of the game.

    And his first half production wasn’t done.
    Keeping Aaron Rodgers off his game

    Donald had another big pressure with a little more than five minutes left in the second quarter. For context, Donald was able to beat a double team involving Taylor and the center, Corey Linsley, on the play before the one I want to talk about. At the end of that play, he was able to push Linsley back into Rodgers’ lap where Linsley ended up stepping on Rodgers’ foot at almost the same time as Rodgers was sailing a pass over the head of Marquez Valdes-Scantling.

    Donald beat that double team in the time it took the receiver to run a 5-yard quick out, for goodness sake, and Rodgers’ poor foot took the worst of it.

    The play we are going to talk about today, however, was actually the next one, another third down. This time the Packers needed 12 yards. Donald was once again lined up as the three-technique on the right. Instead of coming inside, this time Donald was determined to beat Taylor around the edge.

    Taylor tried to jump set Donald right at the line. Taylor knew he had the center sliding his way to help inside, so it appears he thought he would try to stone Donald right at the line of scrimmage by ambushing him with a big punch at the snap and try to force him inside to Linsley.

    Against most three-techniques that’s probably a winning strategy. Against Donald, it turned out to be a disaster.

    Donald jetted off the ball and, once he saw Taylor coming at him aggressively, he immediately went with with a cross chop with his hand and arm that was accurate and forceful enough to keep Taylor’s hand from ever making it to Donald’s chest, even with Taylor’s big punch attempt. Donald followed that up with a quick swat to the back of Taylor’s upper left arm to pin Taylor’s outside arm so he could slide right by him.

    The fact that Donald was able to negate Taylor’s outside hand, but allowed Taylor’s inside hand to punch him actually worked against Taylor because it forced him to turn his body perpendicular to the line of scrimmage, instead of staying relatively parallel to it. Offensive linemen generally do not want to be perpendicular to the line of scrimmage because it tends to give pass rushers a shorter corner, but it is especially a killer if you have a beast like Donald on your ass.

    The force of Taylor’s jump set did push Donald a little wide, so he ended up having to do a quick arm over on left tackle David Bakhtiari’s inside shoulder. But once he cleared Bakhtiari, Donald had a clear path to Rodgers again because Taylor was still struggling to catch up.

    All Donald did was dip low and haul ass through Taylor’s outside edge at that point, and he was once again able to force Rodgers into speeding up his throw.

    A throw that he also couldn’t step into.

    Davante Adams was running a sort of double move that was ultimately just a dressed up, long comeback route. He had the slightest bit of separation on cornerback Marcus Peters. Had Rodgers been able to set his feet and step into the throw, there is a good chance that he throws a good ball to Adams who catches it at the sticks for the first down. Adams had himself one hell of a day on Sunday, after all.

    It wasn’t to be, because Donald had once again wrecked shop.

    The funny thing about the announcer saying they hadn’t called Donald’s name all game is right after he said it, the broadcast went into a montage of plays Donald had already made, including the two I just described.

    Might be time to fill that new eyeglass prescription, bub!
    Down in the blink of an eye

    OK, so I’ve already established that Donald did in fact show up in the first half with the plays described up above. It’s also undeniably true that he turned all the way the hell up in the second half of the game.

    When his team needed him the most is when Donald absolutely shined the brightest against Green Bay.

    Up 10-8, the Packers had marched the ball all the way down to the Rams’ 26-yard line on their first possession of the second half on offense. They were facing yet another third down, but this time they only needed to gain two yards to get a new set of downs. They had to have been salivating at the prospect of tacking on another touchdown to give themselves a little more breathing room.

    Once again, Donald came charging to the rescue.

    He was lined up as the three-technique on the right. Taylor had to be tired of seeing him by then. I sure would have been. Nonetheless, Taylor was once again tasked with trying to at least slow Donald down.

    Once again, he failed.

    Sometimes it takes a lot of words to explain what Donald did to beat an offensive lineman. This time, however, what he did was simple. He just ran right past Taylor then jumped on Rodgers’ back in the blink of an eye.

    I mean, sure, Donald appeared to be trying to run a TEX game at first, with his hands all extended like he was trying to get to Bakhtiari’s back. I don’t know if he was really trying to run that game or if he was trying to fake out Bakhtiari or if the edge rusher just didn’t cooperate. What I do know is when Donald saw that he wasn’t actually going to get to Bakhtiari’s back, he didn’t hesitate at all to transition into a straight speed rush. He went from fifth gear, to sixth, then hit the NOS. All Taylor could do was watch helplessly because he was beaten almost right from the get go.

    See, Taylor was just a hair late on snap. That was all it took for him to be stuck watching the back of Donald’s jersey for the rest of the play.

    Donald took Rodgers down for a loss of 9 yards, forcing Green Bay to settle for a field goal.

    In a game that was won by a grand total of two points, I’d say that play qualified as a big fucking deal.
    And now for the piece de resistance …

    I know a lot of people are complaining and whining that we were deprived of seeing one of those patented Rodgers comebacks on Sunday, all because Ty Montgomery fumbled on the kickoff return with just over two minutes left in the game. The Packers were only down two points after the Rams kicked a field goal to take the lead on the preceding drive, and Rodgers getting into field goal range in that situation is something we just expect.

    A game-winning touchdown drive wouldn’t have been all that surprising, either.

    But I want to point out that the Packers had already squandered a prime opportunity to go down the field and try to put the game away on offense, up a single point, and with just under six minutes left in the game. Even if they didn’t score on that drive, had they at least been able to milk the clock they would have at least put pressure on an L.A. offense that had uncharacteristically been running hot and cold all game.

    Instead, the last time Rodgers actually saw the field on Sunday, he was being sacked by Donald for the second and final time. A sack on third down which forced the Packers into a three-and-out. A sack that forced the Packers to punt from their own 16-yard line.

    On that third down, the Rams set the Green Bay offensive line up for the okie doke.

    Donald was once again the right three-technique, but this time L.A. had one of their linebackers, Corey Littleton, walk up and mug Linsley. After the snap, Littleton faked as if he was blitzing to the center’s right hand, away from Donald, for a couple of steps into that A gap. But then, Littleton stopped and looped back to his right towards Donald.

    That’s because he was actually running a sort of TOM game where Donald was the penetrator and Littleton was supposed to loop behind him.

    And penetrate Donald did.

    Talk about being on the details, Donald got into a right handed stance so that he could take one step upfield with his outside foot, then push off that foot to redirect into an inside rip move. Because Littleton had pulled Linsley away from Donald, that made the A gap inside Taylor that much wider, and Donald took full advantage. He beat Taylor so quickly and cleanly that Rodgers had barely finished his drop back and Donald was already on him.

    Rodgers is legendary for his ability to avoid pass rushers, but Donald seemed to appear out of nowhere, right in his face. At that point all Rodgers could do was give up the ghost and accept his fate. Rodgers turtled up and allowed his legs to give so he could go down while taking the least amount of punishment possible. The result was a loss of 10 yards.

    After Green Bay punted the Rams started their next drive already at the Packers’ 40-yard line, still down a single point. We all know how things finished up from there.

    So, yeah, Donald may not have put up crazy sack numbers again, but his impact, especially on third downs, was glaring. Donald put his team on his back time and time again on Sunday. His two sacks, five pressures and two tackles against the Packers was just enough to help them get the victory by one of the slimmest of margins.

    His film however, showed me that Aaron Donald was more than deserving of my Hoss Of The Week honors the second week in a row.

    The reigning and defending Defensive Player Of The Year now leads the NFL in sacks with 10 on the year, and he looks well on his way to earning that title again.

    Agamemnon

    #93272
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    Donald is the real reason Aaron Rodgers never got a chance at a comeback

    Great article.

    And I buy the argument too.

    #93470
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    #93512
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Agamemnon

    #93566
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    Aaron Donald is even better than he was a year ago, running away with DPOY in 2018

    https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/pro-aaron-donald-is-even-better-than-he-was-a-year-ago-running-away-with-dpoy-in-2018

    Those who follow Pro Football Focus closely know we have a profound admiration of Los Angeles Rams star defensive interior lineman Aaron Donald, and nothing’s changing in 2018. A year removed from rightfully taking home the Defensive Player of the Year award, Donald has found a way to outperform himself through Week 9 of the 2018 season.

    Prior to this year, Donald ranked first and second among defensive interiors in pressure percentage through Week 9 of any NFL season in the PFF era (2006-Present). His 19.6% mark a year ago ranked first, and his 18.2 pressure percentage in 2016 ranked second. Now, Donald leads all at his position in pressure percentage (20.1%) through Week 9 and has, in turn, ranked first, second and third in pressure percentage through the first nine weeks of a season in the PFF era.

    In addition to pressure percentage, Donald shares the PFF-era lead in total pressures through Week 9 by a defensive interior with the 2014 version of Houston Texans’ J.J. Watt at 61. His 26.3% pressure percentage on third and fourth down this season also ranks ahead of his 2017 mark of 25.0% and now leads all defensive interiors with 50-plus pass-rush snaps on such downs through the first nine weeks of a season in the PFF era.

    Praise for Donald’s pass-rushing prowess is boundless, as his 27 pressures on passes of 2.5 seconds or less through Week 9 leads all NFL defenders with at least one pass-rush snap in the PFF era (2006-Present). In fact, his 27 quick pressures are six more than the second-ranked defender on the list (Von Miller; 2015). And that only includes the times the quarterback has held onto the ball long enough for Donald to record a pressure; he has beaten his opposition an additional 15 times on the quicker dropbacks – the most ever by a defensive interior in Weeks 1-9.

    Par for the course, Donald’s run defense is also among the best in the league. His 93.3 run-defense grade ranks first among all defensive interiors with 100-plus run-defense snaps this season and second in the PFF era through the first nine weeks behind Albert Haynesworth’s 95.9 run-defense grade in 2007.

    On early downs (first and second), Donald has earned a 93.1 run-defense grade – again falling second behind Haynesworth. His average depth of tackle on such downs is -0.36 yards, as well, ranking second in the PFF era among defensive interiors with 10-plus tackles in run defense in Weeks 1-9.

    Donald is breaking records he previously owned, dominating both primary phases of the game and no one player is coming close to his high-level impact and production. We might as well give him the DPOY award now to end any unwarranted speculation.

    #93712
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Agamemnon

    #93746
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