Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Whitworth on Eisen… & Whitworth's first career playoff win
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January 16, 2019 at 12:09 am #96765
znModeratorJanuary 16, 2019 at 8:17 am #96787
znModeratorWhat a moment đ@awhitworth77 celebrates his first playoff win in eight trips. #FootballisFamily pic.twitter.com/j5xuNIDaCc
— Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) January 13, 2019
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Andrew Whitworth may be the most underappreciated player of his generation.
Guy's 37 years old. He has no right to be this good:pic.twitter.com/nLMfd9goj3
— Sam Monson (@PFF_Sam) January 15, 2019
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January 16, 2019 at 8:20 am #96789
znModeratorWhitworth wins first-career playoff game, headed to home state for NFC title game
Clarence Dennis
Veteran left tackle Andrew Whitworth is going home.
Heâs headed to the NFC Championship game against the Saints in his home state of Louisiana by way of a win.
It sounds simple. No team has a bye to the conference title game. You must win â prove you deserve to play for a chance to move on to footballâs greatest spectacle.
And for the first time in 13 professional seasons, Whitworth won.The 6-foot-7, 335-pound, 37-year-old father of four didnât earn his first-career playoff victory riding the bench or tagging in and out of the Ramsâ 30-22 victory against the Cowboys on Saturday night in the Divisional round.
Whitworth played the same integral role leading the Ramsâ No. 2-ranked scoring offense on Saturday as he has all season. âBig Whitâ protected his 24-year-old signal caller and swept some of the NFLâs best from the path of his newest running back duo. The father time of the offensive line didnât âgetâ his first playoff win, he earned it.
Outside linebacker Dante Fowler Jr. could tell from the sideline.
âThe intensity that Whitworth brought â he set the tone â especially with that touchdown that Gurley had,â Fowler said. âThat was really the tone-setter. I think that was the difference in the game.â
If anyone recognizes an effort by an offensive tackle, itâs an edge rusher like Fowler. But it wasnât just Fowler shouting out the behemoth, left-most member of the Ramsâ offensive line, which allowed just one quarterback hit and two tackles for loss against defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence and the Cowboys.âIt’s incredible,â quarterback Jared Goff said after the game. âIt makes it all worth it seeing his face after the game.â
âThat’s what’s so special about football,â head coach Sean McVay. âTalking about a guy like Andrew Whitworth whoâs been playing as long as he has, to see him play at the level that he played at tonight and then to be able to get his first playoff win with these guys â his teammates that I know he cares so much about and loves these guys.â
In the play Fowler described as the tone-setter for the Ramsâ first playoff victory since what may have felt like the Dark Ages, Whitworth was on a mission, paving a path for Gurley with all 13 years of his NFL experience.
After making his initial block at the line of scrimmage, Whitworth shoved Cowboys safety Jeff Heath to the turf, prompting Foxâs play-by-play announcer Joe Buck to exclaim to America how much room Gurley had to work with in the 35-yard touchdown dash.
It was a lot of room.“You see Whitworth taking over his blocks and you anticipate nice holes, but you don’t see them until after,” left guard Rodger Saffold told ESPN. “The hole Gurley ran through on the touchdown? I didn’t see that until the replay, and I was like, ‘You’ve got to be kidding.'”
Whitworth was at it all night, playing 100 percent of the offensive snaps. A first-time fan looking on from the Coliseumâs stands, unknowing of the veteranâs NFL impressive tenure could have easily confused No. 77 for one of his youthful teammates, striving for the chance to play one more game.
After his own first playoff win, Gurley said watching Whitworth get over the hump couldnât be described. The star running back seemed near guilty, reviewing his own experience â heading to the playoffs relatively early in his career.
“I’ve always appreciated him,â Gurley said. âMost guys in my position â I’ve been winning my whole life. So, when you’re in the NFL, you’re not going to win every game. The chances of that are slim to none, so you just got to be able learn how to take those wins and those losses and just be able to get better each week and just bounce back from that.â
Seven times, Whitworth finished the 16-game season, took the field as one of 12 left tackles with the chance to hoist the Lombardi Trophy, and played 60 minutes of playoff football only to go home. It happened six times in Cincinnati and once last season in Los Angeles.But on his eighth chance, Goff was kept clean, the Rams set a season-high in rushing yards with two 100-yard rushers playoffs for the first time in franchise playoff history, and for the very first time, the captain is on to the next.
âItâs great, but you know what, I feel like this team has potential for more than that,â Whitworth said. âSo itâs a great feeling and Iâm happy to have it, but I didnât try to get to the playoffs to just win a playoff game. Iâm trying to win a Super Bowl. Thatâs the only focus and now we are one step closer.âJanuary 16, 2019 at 9:00 am #96794
znModeratorAndrew Whitworth (@awhitworth77) is special in every way, man. This was the 63-yard FG attempt before half. He's 37-years old and he's the first and fastest one down field in case the kick is short and the offense needs to make a tackle…. Unreal. You can't replicate this. pic.twitter.com/JjqJDjDGHs
— Sosa K (@QBsMVP) January 14, 2019
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