big articles on the Bills game

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  • #153761
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    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    We know him by now.

    Peak Stafford.

    Knife-twisting Stafford (trust me).

    Purest throws of illest advice Stafford.

    But we’re getting a new level of Puka Nacua every week.

    These two show Rams fans what is still possible this season.

    ***

    ‘Igniter’ Puka Nacua, Matthew Stafford and Rams’ stars show glimpse of what’s possible

    Jourdan Rodrigue

    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5980191/2024/12/09/rams-puka-nacua-matthew-stafford-playoffs-bills/?source=emp_shared_article

    INGLEWOOD, Calif. — This much is true and held true in the Los Angeles Rams’ eye-popping, all-too-narrow, heart-valve-busting 44-42 win over the AFC East champion Buffalo Bills on Sunday:

    When quarterback Matthew Stafford and his cast of offensive stars are at their best, they’re hard — almost impossible — to beat.

    Stafford was 23 of 30 for two touchdowns and no interceptions, a passer rating of 132.6 and a staggering EPA (expected points added) per play of 0.78 according to analytics calculator RBSDM.com.

    He was the player we’ve come to know as “Peak Stafford,” complete with arm angles that don’t make any sense at all and knife-twisting audibles at the line of scrimmage, with some of the purest yet most unwise throws you’ll ever see (including an unbelievable sideline toe-tapping catch by second-year receiver Puka Nacua in the second quarter, which Nacua said Stafford threw blindly because of pressure in his face).

    “Shoot, I absolutely believe and trust (in that) ball coming out of No. 9’s hand with every inch of my body,” Nacua said. “When I see the track, and it spins so right, I’m like, ‘I know exactly where this ball is gonna be.’ ”

    Stafford had a little extra in him on Sunday, too.

    We knew it the moment he flushed out of the pocket on a third-and-9 in the first quarter and threw on the run to Nacua to convert the first down. The Rams started 3 for 3 on third down on that opening possession, which was a touchdown drive, and finished the game 11 for 15 on third down. They didn’t punt until the fourth quarter.

    A third-and-5 screen touchdown to Nacua, that helped stave off a furious Josh Allen-fueled Buffalo comeback, was vintage Stafford.

    “Peak” Stafford.

    Knife-twisting Stafford, whatever you’d like to call it. Hell, just let him literally call it.

    The play was an audible at the line of scrimmage into a play that was essentially the inverse design of a screen pass Stafford threw to Nacua for a touchdown in Week 13 against New Orleans. That previous play, from the Saints’ 7-yard line, sent Nacua in a double motion across the formation before popping into his split on the right side and was built out of their run/pass option family of concepts. It manifested with a quick pass from Stafford to Nacua with blocking up the right and to the outside.

    Against the Bills, there was no real run option as Stafford made his check (though the play looked similar pre-snap) and Nacua stayed static pre-snap in his split on the right side and cut the screen movement inside.

    There’s more: The play from Week 13 was itself a version of another screen that showed a similar pre-snap look that Stafford and the Rams used in previous seasons. Sunday, Stafford kept his signal for the new play the same as the much older concepts because he noted that some Bills defenders knew the signal for it and could possibly reorganize the defense. Ultimately, the Rams ran a completely different play out of that same signal. Nacua scored — the 19-yarder was well-blocked as he carried the ball into the end zone.

    The Rams previously were converting only about one-third of third-down attempts, third worst in the NFL, and had nine touchdown-less first quarters this season plus a first-half shutout in New Orleans in Week 13.

    Seven of the converted third downs — including the fourth-quarter touchdown — belonged to Nacua, who for all his ascension into stardom with a historic rookie season in 2023 flashed even brighter against the rolling Bills. Nacua finished the game with 12 catches for 162 yards, a receiving touchdown and a rushing touchdown and said he wished he could have dug out a few more safeties for running back Kyren Williams in the blocking surface. Williams had 87 yards and two touchdowns (he eclipsed 1,000 rushing yards in the effort) and backup Blake Corum added a tough 34 yards on eight carries.

    “He was such an igniter today,” Rams head coach Sean McVay said of Nacua, exhaling with awe as he spoke. “I thought obviously Matthew was in total command. I thought Kyren and Blake both had some really tough, hard-earned runs. I thought the line was straining. … Puka, for him to come up the way that he did … he was awesome.

    “He’s so physically and mentally tough. Love him. ‘Igniter’ is one of the biggest compliments I can give somebody. You elevate everybody around you, you bring energy to this football team, and he certainly did that today.”

    The Bills, colleague Joe Buscaglia told me, even practiced all week the “blind pass breakup” technique needed to defend the air-bending sideline pass that Stafford seems to throw Nacua’s way every few games. It didn’t matter.

    It’s called “GOAT” energy, Williams said emphatically after the game. Nacua has it in spades.

    But when he, Stafford and Williams (with a healthy assist from veteran Cooper Kupp, of course, who added 92 yards and a touchdown off of five catches) are on the field and operating at their intended level, the Rams offense reaches new highs. That’s what carried them into a surprise wild card last season and propelled L.A.’s statistics to the top of the NFL.

    That, plus an offensive line that didn’t allow a sack in only its second game together as a group, in theory helps the Rams as they enter the most crucial weeks of their season. They have a 33 percent chance of making the playoffs according to The Athletic’s model, are a game back in the NFC West from Seattle and play each of their NFC West opponents a final time in three of their last four regular-season games starting with the San Francisco 49ers on Thursday.

    They’ll need as much or more out of their special teams unit and defense. The former provided a major catalyst Sunday, when reserve inside linebacker Jake Hummel blocked a Buffalo punt in the second quarter and rotational tight end Hunter Long scooped up the loose football and ran it in for a touchdown.

    The defense, on the other hand, started to fall apart in the second half when the Bills decided to cut a pocket-comfortable Allen totally loose in hopes of closing a 31-14 deficit.

    Allen almost did, too. In the second half he escaped pressure, found an open gap and went on the run for explosive gains that set up each of three touchdown drives.

    In the third quarter, Allen broke off a 17-yard run on second-and-25, then threw a 51-yard touchdown to receiver Khalil Shakir on the next play. As the fourth quarter began, Allen picked up another 20 yards by running out of pressure, then got extra yards via a horse-collar penalty (outside linebacker Jared Verse). Allen ran in a touchdown himself to cap the drive. On a possession in the fourth quarter, down 38-28, Allen’s 30-yard run set up another touchdown to bring the Bills within three points, 38-35, with 8:49 to play.

    We can’t know what was said over the Bills’ headset communications as Allen started heating up and playing that particular brand of hero-ball by which he is so known. But everyone felt the moment the energy shifted.

    “Yeah, you could feel it from the field, too,” said McVay with a grim smile. While some teams opt to spy Allen because of his running ability, the Rams appeared to lack one specific answer or adjustment that would consistently work.

    “We had some movements up front where you’re trying to have some ‘cover-me’s’ and things like that, but if you leave a gap open he’s going to step up and he can extend and keep his eyes down the field or he can run away from you. He can break tackles. I mean, he’s a nightmare to defend.

    “It’s a balance of, I don’t think you can just sit back and just let him navigate the pocket. He can beat you from the pocket. He can beat you with his mind. He can beat you with his arm, he can beat you with his legs. That’s why he is a legitimate MVP candidate, he’s one of the best players in this league. We were searching for some different answers.”

    Nacua’s fourth-quarter touchdown, and some questionable late-game decisions by Bills coaches, helped preserved just enough of the Rams’ lead.

    In the locker room afterward, their entire medical and athletic training staff hustled to set up recovery equipment for players to preserve just enough of their bodies before Thursday.

    That’s when the weight and the stakes of the postseason truly begin.

    What version of the Rams — whose highs were reached Sunday, but who have also hit many lows all season — will we see?

    “I think we just keep going to work,” McVay said. “These guys have done a great job of really just being able to commit to, ‘Are we doing everything in our powers to have no regrets when we look back on this thing?’ Are we really putting it out there? Are we not afraid to do whatever it takes to try to be able to come away with the result? No matter what happens, let’s go cut it loose. Let’s go play free.”

    #153795
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    Rams make a statement by scoring 44 points to beat AFC powerhouse Bills

    Gary Klein

    https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/story/2024-12-08/rams-score-44-points-upset-buffalo-bills

    So maybe this Rams team is better than average.

    Perhaps coach Sean McVay finally has them on track to win the NFC West.

    And, dare we posit it: A deep playoff run?

    It’s all out there for the Rams, who went from marginal-all-season to mostly magnificent for a day with a 44-42 victory over the Buffalo Bills on Sunday in front of 73,493 at SoFi Stadium.

    Running back Kyren Williams and receiver Puka Nacua each scored two touchdowns, Matthew Stafford passed for 320 yards, and special teams came up big as the Rams improved to 7-6.

    “Players did the damn thing,” coach Sean McVay said proudly.

    It is the first time this season that the Rams have been above .500, and they did it by holding on to defeat one of the best teams in the NFL.

    Consider:

    The Bills went into the game with a 10-2 record and riding a seven-game winning streak.
    They had scored 30 points or more in six straight games.
    They were fresh off clinching a fifth consecutive AFC East title and in contention for the No. 1 seed in the AFC playoffs.
    But even with the vaunted “Bills Mafia” making up the majority of fans in the stadium — and Bills quarterback Josh Allen accounting for six touchdowns — the Rams registered their most impressive victory of the season.

    “Beating a team like this is a huge confidence booster for us,” said Williams, who rushed for 87 yards in a career-high 29 carries. “But we knew we were going to come in and beat them, so we’ve got to continue to keep going like that.”

    The victory moved the Rams into second place in the NFC West behind the Seattle Seahawks (8-5), a 30-18 winner Sunday over the Arizona Cardinals (6-7).

    The Rams do not have much time to savor the victory. On Thursday night in Santa Clara they play the San Francisco 49ers (6-7), who beat the Chicago Bears on Sunday.

    “It’s going to feel like a playoff game,” linebacker Michael Hoecht said.

    The Rams must once again play “fast and free,” McVay said.

    “That’s going to be a key, critical factor for us to be able to have a chance to go do what we need to do on Thursday night,” he said.

    On Sunday, no Ram played with more elan than Nacua, who McVay described as “an igniter.” The second-year pro caught 12 passes for 162 yards and a touchdown and also rushed for a touchdown.

    “It’s fantastic being able to feel like, ‘Man this is what it feels like when the Rams are moving and connecting on all cylinders,’” Nacua said. “But also [there are] still moments where we know we can execute a little bit better to make this game a blowout.”

    The Rams scored early. They scored often. They scored more points in a game than they had all season, eclipsing the 30 they posted in an Oct. 24 victory over the Minnesota Vikings.

    The Rams led, 24-14, at halftime. It marked the most points the Rams had scored in the first half since a game in 2022.

    That was the Rams’ lost season, the worst Super Bowl hangover in NFL history, that had begun with a 31-10 wipeout by the Bills and featured Stafford getting mauled seven times for sacks.

    This time, the line kept Stafford clean. Williams and Blake Corum ran with authority. The Rams converted 11 of 15 third downs.

    “Our guys did an amazing job up front,” said Stafford, who passed for two touchdowns, giving him 10 in the last four games. “It starts with those guys.”

    While the offense hummed for most of the game, the defense struggled to neutralize Allen. The MVP candidate produced another otherworldly performance.

    “Josh Allen is an alien,” McVay said.

    The 6-foot-5, 237-pound Allen accounted for all six Bills touchdowns, becoming the first player with three rushing and three passing touchdowns in an NFL game. He passed for 342 yards and three touchdowns, and rushed for 82 yards and three touchdowns.

    “He was something to deal with,” rookie safety Kam Kinchens said, shaking his head.

    The Rams offense was their best defense.

    The notoriously slow-starting Rams built their 10-point halftime lead on touchdown runs by Williams and Nacua and tight end Hunter Long’s touchdown return of a blocked punt.

    Stafford’s touchdown pass to Cooper Kupp near the end of the third quarter extended the Rams’ lead to 38-21.

    But Allen’s short touchdown run and his scoring pass to Mack Hollins pulled the Bills within 38-35 with almost 9 minutes left.

    Stafford’s fourth-down pass to Tutu Atwell with just under 4 minutes left kept alive a drive that Nacua capped with a 19-yard touchdown for a 44-35 lead.

    Check out the game summary from the Rams’ win Sunday.

    Allen’s sneak for a touchdown with a minute left cut the deficit, but the Rams recovered the onside kick and ran out the clock.

    So now it’s on to play the 49ers, a team the Rams defeated in Week 3 at SoFi Stadium.

    The Rams remain in search of a totally complete performance, one that includes a high-powered offense, suffocating defense and opportunistic special teams.

    “You saw how good our offense was,” edge rusher Jared Verse said. “Imagine our defense playing at full capacity. … If we put out offense and defense together, that’s a scary sight.

    “That’s a Super Bowl-winning team.”

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