How good will the defense be

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  • #87019
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    Michael Brockers savors what the Rams defense might become

    MARK WHICKER

    link: https://www.ocregister.com/2018/06/03/whicker-michael-brockers-savors-what-the-rams-defense-might-become/

    THOUSAND OAKS – The sacking of the quarterback is not always an unconditional victory.

    The Rams trailed Atlanta, 13-0, in the second quarter of the NFL wild-card playoff game five months ago. A Coliseum crowd edgily waited to find its voice.

    With 6:28 left in the second quarter, Michael Brockers and Aaron Donald responded to the snap and met each other at the body of quarterback Matt Ryan.

    The Falcons punted and the fans let loose. Hardly anyone noticed the way Brockers was limping off.

    “Going for the sack, AD was going low, I was going high,” Brockers said, after he came off the practice field last week. “I guess he just pushed my MCL in. I was just lucky I didn’t have to have surgery. If we’d played the next week, I probably would have tried to get out there.”

    Rams defensive tackle Michael Brockers (90) sacks Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan in the first half of a Wild Card NFL playoff game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Sunday, Jan. 06, 2018 in Los Angeles. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)
    Rams defensive tackle Michael Brockers (90) sacks Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan in the first half of a Wild Card NFL playoff game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Sunday, Jan. 06, 2018 in Los Angeles. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)
    The Rams didn’t play the next week. Atlanta did, after a 26-13 victory, and the Rams’ breakneck season ran into a wall.

    Brockers did not come back, and the Falcons hung onto the ball for 19:39 in the second half. They ran the ball 24 times in that half, often to where Brockers would have been. They opened that half with a 16-play drive and ran 12 times. All of that kept a baseball cap on Jared Goff’s head, instead of a helmet.

    “I think it’s all about starting over,” Brockers said. “It hurts to lose like that. We had to pick ourselves back up. But we’ve got a lot going for us. It’s Goff’s second year with this playbook, it’s Todd Gurley’s second year, it’s the second year for a lot of us.

    “There’s deeper meaning, deeper details in what we have to do. We need to play faster.”

    But the Rams spent their offseason making sure the opponent plays slower.

    They brought in cornerbacks Marcus Peters, Aqib Talib and Sam Shields. Then Brockers was waiting for one more call. The coaches kept telling him the Rams were close to signing Ndamukong Suh to defend the middle.

    “There’s usually a lot of hype during free-agent season,” Brockers said.

    Then the call came. Suh will indeed be playing next to Brockers. The possibilities began to show themselves during the Rams’ OTAs.

    L.A.’s defense improved significantly during the first season of defensive coordinator Wade Phillips. Its run-stopping did not. Five different teams averaged 5 yards per rush or more against the Rams. They gave up 15 running touchdowns and could only hold the foes to 4.7 yards per rush, second worst in the NFL (to the Chargers).

    Suh has either been first or second-team All-Pro five times. He will play between Donald and Brockers in the 3-4. According to Pro Football Focus, Suh was the second-best defensive linemen against the run last year, Brockers was 10th and Donald 12th. There will not be a more credentialed three-man front in the NFL.

    “Somebody’s going to have to deal with Suh,” Brockers said. “Somebody’s going to have to deal with AD. Coach Wade does a good job of not taking away anybody’s fastball. I think it’s exciting. We just have to figure out what each of us likes to do.”

    What Brockers would like to do is win. He is the only 7-year Ram on the roster who isn’t a kicker. He played with Bennie Logan, Barkevious Mingo, Sam Montgomery and Drake Nevis on LSU’s line. He has a genial, big-brotherly air, which is no coincidence.

    Brockers’ mother Tiffany is a single parent of five in Houston. Michael was the oldest, and he made sure the other four had their school clothes ready and their homework done while Tiffany worked two jobs. Then he worked at a burger joint at Hobby Airport.
    “We had to do whatever it took,” he said. “It became a team thing.”

    Brockers went out for football at Chavez High because he was big, not because he was strong. The coaches called him “Goo.” He worked himself into the hearts of recruiters and went to LSU. He came back to visit the family, but Tiffany had been forced to move everyone to a more dangerous part of town. So Brockers turned pro after his redshirt sophomore year, and the Rams picked him 14th in the 2012 first round.

    “The first thing I did with the money was buy them a house,” he said. “It’s out in Pearland, which used to be out in the country. But I didn’t want them to have to worry about somebody breaking into the house.”

    The Rams have assembled as many locks as they can. As long as they can avoid each other, they have a chance.

    #87156
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    from: NFL’s best defenses: Who got better, worse, and who’s next up

    Matt Bowen

    http://www.espn.com/blog/nflnation/post/_/id/276290/top-defenses-whos-better-worse-and-new-one-to-watch

    Despite the three months that remain until kickoff, a handful of NFL teams are vying to stay in the conversation among the league’s best defenses long before they play a single snap in 2018.

    During the offseason, these teams took steps via pricey free-agent acquisitions, trades and the draft to make marked improvements to their defensive personnel; moves that aim to bolster the championship aspirations many of them already had.

    Here’s a look at where things stand for the top five defenses from last year, from roster additions and subtractions to how much better or worse each got, as well as which other team might crack the top five by the season’s end.

    One to watch in 2018

    Los Angeles Rams

    Major additions: CB Marcus Peters, CB Aqib Talib, DT Ndamukong Suh, S Lamarcus Joyner (re-signed)

    Major losses: CB Trumaine Johnson, DE Robert Quinn, LB Alec Ogletree

    2018 outlook: The Rams took a win-now approach in the offseason, opting for the veteran trade market and free agency to add key pieces to Wade Phillips’ defensive unit. Yes, the lack of proven edge rushers and second-level defenders should be brought into this discussion. I get it. However, with the additions of cornerbacks Marcus Peters and Aqib Talib via trades — along with placing the franchise tag on versatile safety Lamarcus Joyner — the L.A. secondary looks legit. That’s a ball-hawking unit, a physical group with the ability to play man coverage, challenge routes and finish. Love it. Lock those receivers down and let the boys up front hunt the QB. Plus, with the Rams landing Ndamukong Suh in free agency, L.A. can pair the veteran defensive tackle with All-Pro Aaron Donald. That gives L.A. two disruptors in the middle of the defense who can also put those linebackers in a position to run free. Read, react and track the ball. And with Phillips pulling the strings in the game plan, the Rams can cater to their strengths to create turnovers, pressure and positive field position. The way I see it, this is a unit with the talent and the upside to make a sizable leap in 2018.

    #87194
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    Even with big names around him on the Rams DL, don’t overlook Michael Brockers

    Lindsey Thiry

    http://www.espn.com/blog/los-angeles-rams/post/_/id/38536/even-with-big-names-around-him-on-the-rams-dl-dont-overlook-michael-brockers

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Les Snead was happy to interject.

    The Los Angeles Rams general manager sat alongside Ndamukong Suh and coach Sean McVay as Suh was introduced as the newest member of the team’s defensive line.

    Reporters peppered the trio with questions about Suh’s addition to a group that already included reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year Aaron Donald.

    A few minutes later, a reporter asked a question that mentioned a third — and less talked-about — starter on the line.

    “I’m glad you brought up Michael Brockers,” Snead said. “He felt left out in the last two questions.”

    At the outset of the offseason program last month, Brockers had become all but the forgotten piece in a position group that features Donald, a four-time Pro Bowl selection and three-time All-Pro, and the recently acquired Suh, also a three-time All-Pro.

    But as the Rams wrap up their third and final week of organized team activities, with Donald not having attended any part of the offseason program because of a contract dispute, the 6-foot-5, 302-pound Brockers has reaffirmed himself as an integral part of a line that is considered among the best in the NFL ahead of the 2018 season.

    And Suh, whom the Rams signed as a free agent after his release from the Miami Dolphins, is adapting to defensive coordinator Wade Phillips’ 3-4 scheme, a system the ninth-year pro has never played in.

    Brockers, entering his seventh season with the Rams after he was selected in the first round of the 2012 draft, is embracing his ability to assist younger teammates.

    And get Suh up to speed.

    “It’s been fun,” Brockers said. “I think it’s more informative for him because he’s new to this. He’s new to playing inside at nose tackle and between the A-gaps all the time. So he’s just trying to find where he fits in this defense and I think he’s jelling in perfectly.”

    Brockers is expected to remain at the 5-technique (lined up outside the offensive tackle), a position he moved to last season when the Rams initially struggled to stop the run after switching from a 4-3.

    Building a relationship with Brockers has been key to Suh’s integration.

    “Overall communication, understanding in rush defense where people are lining up, how things are going to move, how he likes to play, how he likes to play off the center or guards when we have twist games, different things of that nature,” Suh said. “Overall it’s just pure communication is best. You guys probably don’t see it as much as you see it from a quarterback’s perspective, but as a front, for us all to be on the same page, we have to communicate.”

    Brockers’ season ended abruptly in 2017 during an NFC wild-card playoff against Atlanta Falcons. In the second quarter, Brockers and Donald met at Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan.

    “I’m going in for the sack,” Brockers said. “AD was coming low on the quarterback, I was going high.”

    The play resulted in Brockers tearing his MCL. He remained on the sideline as the Rams fell in their first playoff appearance since 2004.

    The injury did not require surgery but proved a sour end in a season Brockers otherwise regarded among his best.

    He finished with a career-high 39 tackles, had 4½ sacks and deflected four passes.

    “There’s always room to improve and get better, but as far as my first season playing — not even starting at that 5-technique but just getting thrown in there — and having a great season, like I did, it felt good,” Brockers said. “For me, personal satisfaction, yeah it was a good season.”

    The defensive line’s chemistry will remain a work in progress until Donald’s holdout ends, but with most of the attention focused on the All-Pro players, Brockers should have plenty of opportunities.

    “In this defense, the way that Wade coaches it, it’s an attack-style defense,” Brockers said. “So I think there’s enough stats around and enough tackles around for everybody.”

    #87238
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    Points allowed last year is a little misleading since the season splits in 2 when it comes to that.

    Discounting the final SF game (played without the starters), that’s 15 games to consider.

    In the 1st 4 games, in spite of holding the Colts to 7 points, the Rams allowed 105 points for an average of 26.25 a game, which taken by itself would have ranked 31st in the league.

    In the next 11 games, the Rams allowed 190 points for an average of 17.3 a game, which taken by itself would have ranked 2nd in the league.

    What’s the difference? Dallas is the 4th game. After Dallas there were these changes: Brockers moves to DE and Johnson replaces Alexander at SS. I suppose it also didn’t hurt that by game 5 Donald was fully up to steam after missing the whole summer.

    31st to 2nd is a huge leap. But they did it. However, this change is hidden if you average in the SF game plus the first 4 games, before they change up the defense a bit. Those 5 games are so bad that combined with the 11 consecutive better games, it changes the average points per game to 20.6 and the overall ranking to 12th.

    #87359
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    Aqib Talib calls Rams secondary ‘probably the best’ he’s played in

    Cameron DaSilva

    Aqib Talib calls Rams secondary 'probably the best' he's played in

    Aqib Talib knows a good defense when he sees one. Having played for two top teams in the New England Patriots and Denver Broncos, Talib is familiar with lining up in some of the best secondaries in the league.

    Now a member of the Los Angeles Rams, Talib has a chance to carry on that tradition by joining Marcus Peters, Lamarcus Joyner, John Johnson and several others in the secondary. Despite parting ways with Trumain Johnson, Kayvon Webster and Cody Davis this offseason, the Rams are absolutely loaded in the defensive backfield and look even stronger on paper than they were in 2017.

    Talib was asked how this unit compares to the Super Bowl-winning group he was a part of in Denver, but he didn’t take the bait.

    He did, however, say this is probably the best secondary he’s ever been in.

    “I’ve been in some great, great secondaries, but top to bottom, with depth, this is probably the best one I’ve played in,” Talib said, via USA TODAY. “The sky’s the limit, we just have to be on our stuff. Be in meetings on time, get sleep at night. The talent is there, you just have to do the extra stuff.”

    Considering the amount of talent the Rams have at both cornerback and safety, it’s hard to argue against Talib’s point. Add in the fact that they also have Sam Shields, Troy Hill and several others deeper down the depth chart and you’d be hard-pressed to find a group better than this one.

    Whether that translates to wins or another Super Bowl title for Talib remains to be seen, but the talent is absolutely there. They just have to capitalize on it.

    #87504
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    Aqib Talib and Marcus Peters: How a Pair of Risk-Taking Corners Could Give the Rams the Edge

    ANDY BENOIT

    https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/06/20/los-angeles-rams-aqib-talib-marcus-peters-defense?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=themmqb&utm_source=twitter.com

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — After the 2017 season, Aqib Talib got a call from Broncos football czar John Elway: The veteran cornerback, who’d just finished his fourth season in Denver, was being traded to San Francisco. “I told him, ‘I ain’t even gonna take no physical in San Fran, so there won’t be no trade,’ ” Talib says.

    Elway asked which teams Talib would play for on his existing contract. (That deal was worth $11 million in 2018 and $8 million in 2019.) There were only three: the Patriots, Cowboys and Rams. This late in his career, Talib craved familiarity.

    “I’m going on year 11, man. I’m not trying to go learn a whole new system. I wanted to go somewhere I’d be comfortable.” Talib says this while sitting on the curb of the sidewalk between the Rams’ practice field and parking lot.

    The Richardson, Texas, native explained, “I’m comfortable if I can live at my house in Dallas and go just around the corner to work. I cut my bills in half. Or if I can go play in a defensive scheme that I’ve played in before. So I told him Dallas, New England or L.A.”

    The Rams, it so happened, had already visited with Elway, and it wasn’t long before Talib got a call from L.A. coach Sean McVay. On March 9, Talib, who has been named to the last five Pro Bowls and was All-Pro in 2016, was dealt to L.A. for a fifth-round pick.

    It was just one of four mega moves by the Rams in what has become the most intriguing, aggressive offseason in recent memory. On April 3 L.A. traded the 23rd overall pick to New England for wideout Brandin Cooks. A week earlier, the Rams signed free-agent defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh to a one-year, $14 million deal. And, before trading for Talib, they dealt a 2019 second-round pick and a 2018 fourth-rounder to Kansas City for Pro Bowl cornerback Marcus Peters and a sixth-round pick. Many believe the moves give L.A. a defense capable of matching the big-play aptitude of its vaunted offense.

    Talib is a creature of habit. He keeps a meticulous notebook on each week’s upcoming opponent. “I go through first- and second-down plays on Wednesdays. Go through their big personnel—‘21’ [2 running backs, 1 tight end] and ‘12’ [1 back, 2 tight ends]. See what they like to do.

    “Usually teams have an [offensive identity], they like to do something. They line up like this, they like to do that. Or they line up like that, and they like to do this.

    “Thursday we go through all third downs—third-and-short, third-and-intermediate, third-and-long. Teams tend to do the same thing over and over again if you really watch. They might make it look different, they may dress it up a little.

    “Fridays I do the red zone, situational stuff, two-minute. Things like that.”

    This pattern is standard across the league, but you can’t help but smile at Talib’s enthusiasm as he describes it.

    Though still an upper-echelon defender, Talib isn’t even the most dynamic corner Los Angeles traded for this offseason. That’d be Marcus Peters, who is new to Wade Phillips’s scheme and these days is often found sitting next to Talib, asking questions.

    Both corners are more matchup-oriented than zone-oriented, but neither has traveled with specific receivers much in recent years. Talib very often played on the left side in Denver. And it was noted constantly that the left side is where Peters played in Kansas City. Many were perplexed that he didn’t shadow No. 1 receivers. Asked how often he heard about this, Peters, sitting in an outdoor lounge near the Rams’ locker room, says, diplomatically but edgily, “Man, I just do what the coaches ask of me.”

    Judging from their work this spring, Rams coaches will often ask Peters to play on the right side. He has little concern about the switch. Same goes for Phillips. “We’re a ‘corners over’ defense,” the veteran defensive coordinator explains. “Our corners go with the wide receivers wherever they are. If both are on the left, both corners are on the left. If both on the right, vice-versa. So we haven’t worried too much in the past, because you have to learn to play both sides anyway.” Notably, the Chiefs have also been a “corners over” defense, with Peters taking the slot against two-receiver packages. But you only get this formation a few times a game.

    Wherever he is, Peters plays to his help, be it from teammates or the sideline. “It’s training wheels, man. The art of a corner ain’t nothing but training wheels. You’ve got two of them, and you’re in the middle. So it don’t matter what side you’re going to lean to, it’s always going to balance out.”

    Still, some players lament flipping sides. It can be a drastic adjustment in technique. In March, Bears guard Josh Sitton put it into context every person can imagine, saying it’s like “trying to wipe your ass with your opposite hand.”

    Asked about this, Peters, either deflecting or just plain missing the point, smiles and says, “I don’t know who wipes with their off hand. That’s nasty.”

    Talib and Peters knew each other before joining the Rams, though not well. Neither can recall their first encounter.

    “I might have first met him when [my Broncos] won the Super Bowl in the Bay,” says Talib. “I think one of those first nights we went out with Marshawn [Lynch, a Bay Area native].”

    “Damn, where’d I meet him at,” Peters ponders aloud, resting his chin in his palm. “Probably on the phone. Or sometime before we played Denver. I’ve always been a fan of his.”

    Much has been made about the big-play potential of the Rams’ offense, which led the league in scoring last year and has since added a true No. 1 speed receiver in Cooks. That hype will continue; McVay has coveted Cooks for years, and has been even more smitten since seeing him in practice. Receivers like Cooks are precisely why the Rams knew they needed quality corners. Plus, having those corners frees up their scheme.

    “In [Talib’s and Peters’s] case, you can put the pressure on them to take out one receiver,” Phillips says. “That helps so much when you’re trying to design what you want to do. It’s such a matchup league, you know? If you have a guy that can match up, you can design different things on defense to help other areas.”

    Whereas before the Rams had a play-stopper in Trumaine Johnson (whom they finally let walk in free agency this offseason), they now have a pair of play-makers. Talib and Peters might rank 1 and 1A in terms of aggressiveness at their position. Their off-coverage, route-jumping style is high-risk, high-reward.

    “High risk is high reward,” says Peters flatly. “There’s a select few of us that can do it, to be honest. That’s what makes us so unique.”

    Peters is quick to cite the value of the defensive backs coaches he has worked with since high school—listing each by name—and is grateful that all of his coaches told him “to just be Marcus. They never told me to change nothing about my game. We just want you to go out and be yourself.”

    It takes a certain level of humility—even courage?—for a coach tell Peters this. Because the 25-year-old corner won’t just take chances—he’ll sometimes deviate completely from a designed coverage. A perfect example was his interception last year in Week 3 at the L.A. Chargers.

    “I know exactly what you’re talking about,” he says quickly at mention of the play. You’ll sometimes see a corner improvise and convert zone coverage into man coverage. But on that play, Peters did the opposite, converting man coverage into zone. It’s almost unheard of, since going zone on your own means letting your assigned receiver run free. “Can’t too many of us do it,” he says.

    It wasn’t done on a whim. “Philip Rivers doesn’t like throwing that route against me,” Peters explains, elaborating on how the intended target, veteran tight end Antonio Gates, relies more on body positioning than speed these days. It was this knowledge that inspired Peters to go rogue and attack the ball.

    Some of Talib’s coverage decisions can be perilous as well, but as with Peters, his gambles tend to be premeditated. “If we’re in Cover 8 [a form of two-deep zone] and I get a certain look? That’s a play for me,” Talib says. “If we’re in Cover 1 [man-to-man], that’s a catch and tackle. I ain’t really trying to do too much. So I figure out where my opportunities are, on what looks.”

    Many corners study tendencies based on a wide receiver’s split—in other words, how far out the receiver is aligned. “But I think nowadays teams do a good job of running a lot of stuff from the same splits or just switching up their splits consistently,” Talib says. “It’s not like back in the day when somebody would line up at the bottom of the field numbers and run the Bang-8 [skinny post] every time. My rookie year that’s how it was—it was clockwork, every time.

    “Now, it’s a new age of football. Splits are not as specific as back in the day. It’s more the receivers themselves now. The deep guys, the intermediate guys, the reverse screen guys. You just got to know the body that you’re covering and have a good idea of what you’re going to get.” Talib then goes into elaborate details on the various things you get based on personnel packages and situations. This is the lens through which he studies opponents.

    You get the sense that his favorite moments are in hurry-up situations. “It’s like playing Nintendo,” he says. “Remember in Nintendo when you were hurrying you’d always go to the same playbook? NFL offenses are the same way.”

    This line of thinking will make the Rams a fascinating defense in 2018. Corners who play tendencies and attack routes are lethal when they’re behind a dominant pass rush that can force quarterbacks to throw on the defense’s schedule. But if the pass rush doesn’t get home, these same corners become susceptible to double moves and late breakdowns in technique. We’ve seen this throughout Peters’s and Talib’s careers. The Rams may have the league’s best interior rush with newcomer Ndamukong Suh and especially Aaron Donald, but they’re thin and unproven on the edges.

    Phillips isn’t worried. “The rush helps the coverage, the coverage helps the rush, you know? Chicken or the egg sometimes. But we had 48 sacks last year, so we feel like we’re going to have a good rush. And then when you’ve got guys of that caliber [on the corners], it will help us not only in the coverage but maybe turnovers too. That’s what we’re looking for.”

    #87633
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    My thotz on “how good will the D be” in June.

    This is open for revision but it’s how it looks right now.

    * this secondary gives WP a lot to work with in terms of the variety of coverages he can field against any given opponent. Not just the starting 4 (and I really like Joyner in this mix) plus obviously Roby-Coleman and Shields.

    * The DL goes without saying. Barring injury, they have Easley, Donald, Suh, Brockers—with Brockers going to camp as a DE for the first time (last year he just switched there after game 4). The questions are, who backs up Suh at NT, and who are the other 1 or 2 rotation/depth guys? I think they have good options when it comes to that. The 4 DL sets ought to be as good as the 3 DL sets. In terms of the 4 DL sets, it looks like they can just line up personnel designed to meet the particular challenges of the teams they play. So for example, they can put Suh at end too, depending on the opponent and what they need to do.

    * Inside LB. Nothing real has happened yet, meaning we haven’t seen them in action with real bullets flying, so we don’t really know BUT WP has long had a knack for manufacturing a good ILB set out of low picks and spare parts. I like Barron (I know some don’t) so really it’s a question of who mans the MIKE spot. And there, again, it’s just a matter of Wade coming up with yet another decent ILB out of what they have to work with. I am cautiously optimistic about this.

    * ILB and NT should answer a lot of the run D issues. I notice that Atlanta attacked them on the ground once they accounted for Brockers being out. So issues at ILB, NT, and DE probably contributed to the run D problems in that game. Brockers being healthy, more depth and experience at DE, Suh, and coming up with a better Mike than last year ought to solve a lot of that, or so you would think. Again the only real unknown is NT depth behind Suh.

    * OLB/edge. Lots of unknowns, as everyone recognizes. Ebukam was a rookie last year and rookie pass rushers rarely do anything. Longacre was playing well last year until he hurt his back (which finally got him IRed). Longacre is an effort guy, but then so was Kevin Greene (not saying ML is KG, just that effort guys can be good pass rushers). Losing Fox and Obo isn’t good but they do have candidates for at least a 3rd outside guy…though again, rookie pass rushers rarely do much. And they could conceivably come up with packages where Littleton rushes too. The thing is, they did not have stellar outside rushers last year and still managed to be 4th in sacks and 4th in sack percentage. Can they do that again? It looks like it’s built around Donald drawing attention and freeing up at least one outside guy. It’s a WP thing to be less system dogmatic and more oriented toward building a D that fits what his players do, so it’s natural for him to come up with ways to get offenses worried about Donald and then take advantage of that. Now there’s Suh too. And on top of all that maybe Ebukam comes through and turns out to be a good one. To equal last year, they need to come up with 20 or so sacks from a committee of outside rushers. On all this, too, I am cautiously optimistic though this is the one that will draw the most scrutiny from fans.

    * If everything else clicks as predicted, they will have a very good D no matter what. If they solve the outside rush issue, even just at a decent “good enough” level, than this could be one of the best Rams defenses we’ve seen for years and years. And I mean going back to the 70s.

    #87641
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    Phillips has High Expectations for Versatile Secondary

    Myles Simmons

    https://www.therams.com/news/phillips-has-high-expectations-for-versatile-secondary

    Much has been made about the way Los Angeles added to its defense over the course of the offseason. And most of that conversations has centered around the strong personalities of cornerback Aqib Talib, cornerback Marcus Peters, and defensive lineman Ndamukong Suh.
    But more than the fact that they’re strong players individually, each is expected to aid the Rams’ collective improvement on defense. That’s particularly in the secondary, where Los Angeles already had emerging young players.
    When training camp begins on July 26, the Rams will have Talib and Peters opposite one another at cornerback, Lamarcus Joyner and John Johnson at safety, plus Nickel Robey-Coleman as slot corner.

    According to defensive coordinator Wade Phillips, those players add a lot to the unit’s versatility as a whole.
    “Not only the two corners, our two safeties are outstanding players and they can cover man to man,” Phillips said during minicamp earlier this month. “So, it gives you so many possibilities to double cover somebody and put the pressure on one of those guys to cover his guy by himself.”
    Given how L.A. is expected to generate pressure with its defensive front along with the cover skills of those in the backend, Phillips figures he’s going to have a lot of options to attack offenses in 2018.

    t opens up a lot of things for you to play. I mean, I can think of a lot of things to play, but I haven’t always had the players to play those coverages and so forth, and these guys can,” Phillips said. “So we’ve got a lot of versatility there and we can put pressure, we can match up guys. Both corners can play both sides, either side. And Robey’s a tremendous nickell-inside player, and the two safeties are outstanding.”
    Phillips finished by surmising all of that information fairly succinctly.
    “I’d be surprised,” he said, “if we weren’t really good on pass defense.”

    #87934
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    ==

    https://www.therams.com/news/daily-dose-rams-with-5th-best-sack-differential-in-2017

    Rams with 5th-Best Sack Differential in 2017

    A key part of the Los Angeles Rams’ success in 2017 was thanks to a revamped offensive line with the additions of veteran C John Sullivan and LT Andrew Whitworth. Last season, Jared Goff was sacked 25 times in 15 games compared to 26 times in just seven games in 2016.
    On the defensive side of the ball, the Rams sacked opposing quarterbacks 48 times in 2017, giving Los Angeles the 5th-best sack differential according to Marcus Mosher of Bleacher Report.

    With the Rams resigning Sullivan to a two-year deal, all five starting offensive linemen return for 2018, although right guard Jamon Brown will sit out the first two games of the season due to his recent suspension.
    ==

    #88059
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