Donald = ‘285 pounds of dynamite’ (the AD in November thread)

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  • #93972
    Avatar photozn
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    Aaron Donald, ‘285 pounds of dynamite,’ is NFL’s ultimate outlier in an offense-heavy season

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2018/11/15/aaron-donald-pounds-dynamite-is-nfls-ultimate-outlier-an-offense-heavy-season/?utm_term=.4dcf38b4917a

    In 2015, shortly after Dave Andrews became the University of Pittsburgh strength and conditioning coach, St. Louis Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald, a Pitt alum, asked him if he would work with him during the NFL offseason. “Obviously, we’ve got the best player in the world, and he comes back to train in the room,” Andrews said. “Why wouldn’t I serve him?”

    Andrews played tight end on Ohio State’s 2002 national title team, and he has trained about 80 NFL players, plus a handful of NBA players. He is not easily stunned by athletic outliers. He has been surrounded by them in his adult life.

    As part of their routine, Andrews would offer Donald manual resistance as opposed to Donald using a machine or weights. Andrews had seen other athletes bench press or squat as much as Donald. He has never seen anything like Donald’s muscles responding to a force exerted on them. In those drills, Andrews was stunned.

    “He’s 285 pounds of dynamite,” Andrews said. “He’s absolutely not human. The electric switch is different with that guy.”

    Monday night in Los Angeles, Donald’s Rams will face the Kansas City Chiefs in a showdown that both exemplifies the NFL’s offense-mad present and hints at the sport’s scoring-crazed future. Patrick Mahomes’s right arm is part magic, part howitzer. Tyreek Hill is so fast he makes you wonder if the TV is broken. Todd Gurley can punish tacklers, sprint past them or leap over them. Coaches Andy Reid and Sean McVay have expanded and redefined professional football playbooks.

    Amid that sparkling firepower, the most overriding force on the field will occupy a paradoxical space: He will be playing defense. In the NFL, nobody is better at what they do than Donald. He is a dominant defender in a league driven by offense, a 6-footer in the territory of giants, a questioned prospect who became an all-timer. In the NFL, Donald is the ultimate outlier.

    Donald is the reigning NFL defensive player of the year, and only injury or the best six games of Khalil Mack’s career will prevent him from repeating. He leads the NFL with 12.5 sacks. He has pressured quarterbacks 67 times, 12 more than any other player. Pro Football Focus rates Donald as the NFL’s best pass rusher and third-best run stopper, regardless of position.

    Numbers, really, cannot do Donald justice. In a league of athletic marvels trained and calibrated for maximum performance, Donald stands apart. His shoulders resemble a relief map of Colorado. Blocking him is like trying to halt a bowling ball affixed with chain saws. At the NFL combine, he ran the 40-yard dash in 4.68 seconds — slow but not unheard of for a wide receiver, implausible for a tackle. He is quick enough to knife through double teams, powerful enough to make the idea of one lineman stopping him comical and strong enough to fling quarterbacks to the ground the way most people chuck a candy wrapper in the trash can.

    “Have you ever seen Rocky IV?” asked Mike Waufle, the Rams’ defensive line coach for Donald’s first three seasons. “When the Russian was training, they had that computerized device that he punched. The force that was there, the strength times speed of his punch, it registered really, really high. That’s Aaron Donald’s body, okay? He has power beyond your wildest dreams.”

    The offseason made clear the value of a player such as Donald. As offense evolves, passes are thrown faster, and the time quarterbacks spend vulnerable in the pocket shrinks. Even the best outside pass rushers often can’t reach quarterbacks in time to sack or even disrupt them. The antidote to the future of offenses looks like Donald, an interior lineman who can maraud into backfields in less than two seconds, taking the most direct line to the quarterback.

    Good luck finding a duplicate. Donald held out during training camp for a new contract, and eventually the Rams succumbed. They madebriefly, because Mack signed for more with Chicago the next day — the highest-paid defensive player in football with a six-year, $135 million contract. He had promised his parents his football career would allow them to retire. “Calling them and telling them they ain’t got to work another day in their life,” Donald said at a news conference after signing, “that felt good.”

    Donald makes sense as a prototype now, but that was not always the case. The reason he plays for the Rams is because his stature fooled almost half the NFL — including the Rams.

    In his final college season, Donald totaled 28.5 tackles for loss, claimed the Bronko Nagurski Award as the country’s best defensive player and left those close to him in awe. “I was so grateful our paths crossed,” said Paul Chryst, Donald’s coach at Pitt for two seasons. “He’s one of those guys, truly, every day you walked away appreciative and enjoying your time with him.”

    Still, Donald was not considered an elite prospect. He is listed at an even 6-feet tall, and he played his senior season at Pitt at about 280 pounds — puny for an NFL interior defensive lineman. Teams who played 3-4 base defense and sought a space-clogging nose tackle believed they had no use for Donald.

    Initially, Waufle may have possessed the same notion. A former Marine who started coaching in 1979, Waufle had coached NFL defensive linemen since 1998. He developed an abiding belief in the importance of size. As he started evaluating prospects before the 2014 draft, Waufle studied Donald and saw an exception.

    “In my years in the NFL and even college football prior to that, he was the best player I’d ever seen on film in college football in that position,” Waufle said. “If we get a chance to get this guy, I felt like he was better than [Jadeveon] Clowney. That’s the way I went about representing. The scouts and those guys felt like he was too small and didn’t give him the highest grade.”

    Teams shared that outlook, Donald knew. He attended the Senior Bowl to prove himself, and NFL executives realized the folly of overlooking him.

    “He definitely came into that week on the low side, as maybe a second-round consideration,” then-Senior Bowl director Phil Savage said. “By the time he left Mobile, he was clearly top half of the first round, if not top 10. In hindsight, it was somewhat of a no-brainer he should have been top 10. He stood out individually with his athleticism, his quickness, his burst, his explosion. He dominated the one-on-ones. He was essentially unblockable. He was the buzz from beginning to end.”

    Inside Rams headquarters, Waufle continued his campaign for Donald. The Rams held the second and 13th picks in the first round. Even though the Rams already had a loaded defensive line, Waufle was serious about wanting to use the No. 2 overall pick on Donald. During one meeting, Waufle climbed a table to place Donald’s name on the draft board above Clowney, the clear-cut consensus No. 1 player out of South Carolina.

    When Donald made a pre-draft visit to St. Louis, Waufle gave him a tour of the facility. Waufle knew the team’s brain trust — Coach Jeff Fisher, General Manager Les Snead and team president Kevin Demoff — were meeting in the draft room. They happened to be watching video of Johnny Manziel, a top quarterback prospect that year. “I had big [guts] doing this,” Waufle recalled. He kicked open the door and proclaimed, “I want you all to meet Aaron Donald!” Waufle, who is 6-foot-4, put his arm around Donald and scrunched down so they were the same height. The men in the room burst out laughing.

    By draft day, Waufle knew the Rams weren’t going to use the No. 2 pick on Donald. They chose offensive lineman Greg Robinson, who ended up as a bust. Waufle had no responsibilities, so he worked on projects in his office with the draft on a television. He paid half attention to the draft until the ninth pick, when he glanced at a rundown of picks and realized, to his shock, nobody had picked Donald.

    Waufle started to get nervous. The Detroit Lions were picking 10th, and he knew their defensive line coach, his friend Jim Washburn, had been politicking hard for Donald inside their building. When the Lions took tight end Eric Ebron, Waufle exhaled.

    The New York Giants went 12th, one pick before St. Louis. Waufle felt certain he’d lose Donald. He had worked for the Giants in 2007, when they beat the undefeated Patriots in the Super Bowl on the strength of a line, which he coached, featuring Michael Strahan, Osi Umenyiora and Justin Tuck.

    “I was scared to death,” Waufle said. “They loved defensive linemen.”

    When the Giants picked wideout Odell Beckham Jr., Waufle beamed. He snuck into the Rams’ draft room. Fisher saw him and told him, “You got your guy.”

    “I was all cranked up,” Waufle said. “I couldn’t believe we got him.”

    The Rams’ elation has not dissipated since. Before the defensive line meeting of Donald’s first training camp, Waufle swiveled in his chair, turned to Donald and told him something he had never told a player in his 25-year career. “I’m gonna say a lot of things about technique,” Waufle said. “I’m gonna say a lot of things about how we play. I don’t want you to listen to one word that I say. You just play.”

    Donald was named defensive rookie of the year. He has made the Pro Bowl every year of his career, and in the past three he has been first-team All Pro.

    Those close to Donald believe he will remain on that path. As his agent and Rams executives negotiated late this summer, Donald trained in Pittsburgh, showing up to work with Andrews as the future of his football career and millions of dollars hung in the balance.

    “You would not be able to tell anything’s on his mind,” Andrews said. “You wouldn’t be able to tell if made two dollars, three dollars, $1 million, $100 million. There’s absolutely no trace. I truly don’t think you’re going to see a different guy regardless of how much money he makes, who he’s around, win or lose.”

    Waufle remembered Donald showing up daily at 6 a.m. One year, a Rams coach spotted him leaving the facility late at night on Christmas. “He works at the game harder than anybody I ever coached,” Waufle said.

    Donald still trains with DeWayne Brown, the speed and agility coach he worked with when he played for Penn Hills High. Donald declined an interview request for this story through a team spokesman because, “he just doesn’t want to talk about himself.” Every time he uses the Pittsburgh weight room, he first calls Andrews for permission.

    “It’s hard to explain,” Andrews said. “It’s the ‘please.’ It’s the ‘thank you.’ It’s the receptiveness when you go ahead and coach him. Again, I didn’t have a prior relationship with him. I was not his college strength coach. From that standpoint, he’s the salt of the earth.”

    Donald can be a normal person, humble and polite, just like anyone else. On a football field, there is nobody like him

    #94037
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    AvengerRam

    Not all sacks are created equal. But my perception is that Aaron Donald’s sacks this year have not only been numerous, they’ve been meaningful.

    So I ran the numbers… how many of Donald’s sacks have been “drive enders,” meaning that the opposing offense does not get another first down (or TD) after the sack.

    The answer is, of the 13 sacks Donald has participated in (he is credited with 12.5 total), 11 have been “drive enders.” That’s both a big number and a high percentage. Specifically, after 9 of his sacks, the opposing team punted before getting another first down, while on the other two, the sacks were on 3rd down and forced the opposing team to kick a field goal rather than going for a TD.

    Given the trouble the Rams have had keeping opposing teams out of the end zone, drive ending sacks are huge. Donald is certainly doing his part.

    #94140
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Agamemnon

    #94194
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
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    i gotta say. i totally disagree with kellerman’s assessment in particular.

    his argument is that lt or a mack could play inside and do what donald does but not vice versa.

    a bunch of horse hockey.

    no way lt or mack could do what donald does from the defensive tackle position. the defensive tackle position as i understand it is one of the hardest positions in football – maybe next to only the quarterback position. one only has to look at the number of dominant defensive tackles in the league compared to the number of dominant edge rushers in the league. you can find edge rushers in the later rounds. normally, you find a defensive tackle capable of being dominant and he won’t make it past the second round.

    the strength and speed of donald can’t be matched. and as to the argument that he couldn’t play other positions? no way. he could play any of the linebacker positions or defensive end and dominate. the reason you don’t put him there is because he’s too valuable at the defensive tackle position – a position most players can’t play much less dominate the way donald does.

    just look at the athletic numbers he put up at 285 pounds. imagine shaving off 20-30 pounds off that frame and what his agility and speed numbers would look like then. at 6’1″ 255 pounds and playing off the edge where he’d have to deal with less traffic? he’d be unstoppable. at 6’1″ 255 pounds and move him back to middle linebacker and put some big honking space eating tackles in the middle like the ravens did with ray lewis? he’d be a nightmare.

    now try and imagine putting taylor or mack or lewis inside at the defensive tackle position. they’d get eaten alive.

    maybe the only guy who i think could rival donald is jj watt. just a mutant of a human being. incomparable really. but has dealt with injuries the previous 2 years. he’s healthier this year though and is putting up numbers again.

    donald is only 5 years into his career. so it’s too soon. but he’s doing things that are transcendent right now.

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 12 months ago by Avatar photoInvaderRam.
    #94197
    Avatar photozn
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    i gotta say. i totally disagree with kellerman’s assessment in particular.

    Yeah. You’re just right about all that.

    #94198
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    i gotta say. i totally disagree with kellerman’s assessment in particular.

    Yeah. You’re just right about all that.

    #94226
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    #94285
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    McVay on AD. From the 11/20 presser, posted here: http://theramshuddle.com/topic/mcvay-11-20-transcript-2/

    (On if DT Aaron Donald’s performance this season is a continuation of what he saw last year or if he seems to be playing at another level this year)

    I think he was well-deserving of Defensive Player of the Year last year and I think he’s even playing better this year. I think he’s truly taken his game to a different level. You feel him every single snap. The impact that he makes on the game in so many different ways that maybe don’t even show up on the stat sheet, even though he is putting up these eye-popping numbers where he’s leading the league in sacks and he’s forcing fumbles….You just kind of get accustomed to, ‘There’s another play (DT) Aaron (Donald) makes,’ but you don’t ever want to take that for granted. The best part about Aaron, and you guys know this, is when you hear Aaron interview, the first thing he says is, ‘I’ve got a lot of room for improvement.’ I think the one thing that I’ve been so impressed with, with him is he is a great player. He’s a special player, but he’s always continually focusing on what he can do to improve. There’s never that complacency that sets in. I think that’s why you see a great player playing at a really high level. I think he raises the level of his teammates. He certainly raises the level of this team and he is making big-time plays at the moments that we need them the most. He is a really, really special player that we are lucky to have.”

    #94297
    Avatar photozn
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    There’s nothing O-Lines can do about Aaron Donald

    https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2806398-rams-aaron-donald-is-the-proud-product-of-his-blue-collar-roots

    He’s been described as humble and kind. But the unblockable Rams defensive end, who can bench press 500 pounds and tear a facemask off of a helmet, will mow down your QB without saying a word.

    Helmets, arms and shoulders hinder his vision, but Aaron Donald bulldozes his way through double-team after double-team. It’s the first half of a Week 4 game against the Minnesota Vikings. Donald has yet to sack anyone in this game, or this season. He isn’t worried, though.

    By the fourth quarter, the All-Pro defensive tackle of the Los Angeles Rams has had enough. He eyes QB Kirk Cousins and prepares to strike.

    NFL quarterbacks fear getting sacked by Donald in the same way ordinary people fear getting older: They know it will happen, and they know they can’t do much about it.

    That doesn’t make it any less terrifying. Not when 6’1″, 280-pound Donald is mowing down 6’4″, 350-pound offensive linemen and anyone else in his way.

    Take a Rams practice Donald’s rookie year, back in 2014. An offensive lineman hit him after a one-on-one drill, and Donald grabbed the lineman’s facemask and completely ripped it off the helmet.

    There was also one game in college at Pittsburgh when Donald tackled Duke’s quarterback and running back at the same time in the middle of a handoff, leaving both men lying helplessly on top of each other.

    “You don’t want to mess with that man,” says Trumaine Johnson, a former Rams cornerback now with the Jets. “He’s a one-man wrecking crew.”

    Not even Donald’s own teeth can catch a break. He used to chew through three mouthpieces a game at Penn Hills High in Pittsburgh, intimidating offensive linemen even before the snap. He was explosive then too, once tearing through a 200-pound resistance band that hugged his waist while he was running a 10-yard split.

    “Did you ever see Rocky IV, with the Russians? He would punch this machine, and the machine would register 2,000 pounds per square inch? Just forces off the charts? That’s Aaron Donald,” former Rams defensive line coach Mike Waufle says. “He has that kind of force in his body.”

    Cousins felt it during that Vikings game. Donald grabbed the QB and threw him to the ground so effortlessly, so powerfully, that Cousins spun nearly 360 degrees on his way down.

    But Donald shrugs recalling that game, in which he finished with two sacks and a career-high 13 QB pressures in a 38-31 victory. Standing to the side of the practice field at the team’s Thousand Oaks facility a week later, he’s not quite frowning, not quite smiling. He looks a little bothered.

    “There was a couple rushes I know I had the opportunity to sack ’em, I let ’em get away,” Donald says.

    His gaze catches the field again, like he wants another crack at it. “I know you ain’t gonna win every single one-on-one, but in my mind, I’m supposed to.”

    This is not hyperbole, not a sound bite for attention. Donald expects to get a sack every time he rushes the QB. He’s disappointed when he doesn’t. Not in a way where he berates himself or harps on plays for hours in a destructive manner.

    Instead, he approaches each down like he’s on the verge of getting cut. Like he’s not the second-highest-paid defensive player in NFL history (he is). Like he’s not the best interior defensive lineman to ever play (he could be).

    On first glance, he doesn’t look like he fits that description. Not just because of his shorter, leaner frame—jacked, but not necessarily imposing—but because he walks around like he’s an ordinary person with an ordinary job.

    The 27-year-old is soft-spoken and economical with his words. Those who know him say he is quiet, humble, kind. Yes, kind. Even if Donald scuffled with Seahawks 315-pound center Justin Britt in Week 10, looking like he might bear hug the air out of his lungs after Britt shoved him out of bounds. Even if Donald then put his helmet back on after the Rams’ win to personally seek out Britt for another fight and grabbed his facemask again.
    “He’s a true gladiator,” former Penn Hills coach Ron Graham says, “but he’s a real likable guy.”
    Donald’s doughy cheeks accentuate his baby face, his gentle alter ego. He’s funny. A little mischievous. Classic Aaron pranks include secretly sprinkling salt in a teammate’s Gatorade and hiding helmets.

    “He’s super playful. He jokes around,” Rams defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh says. “But that turns into complete seriousness when we’re on the field.”

    Which is where he spends most of his time. On cue, Donald says, “My dad always told me, ‘Hard work pays off.'” He says the words “hard work” and “work hard” six times over the course of 10 minutes that day after practice. Donald says these things not because they’re his script, but because they’re his compass—the guiding principles of his life.

    Bill Johnson, the Rams’ defensive line coach, has never entered the team’s meeting room without Donald already being in there first, dissecting film for hours on end. It is the “blue collar” in him, the Pittsburgh in him. Like a mechanic or a factory worker, Donald puts in an honest day’s work. “He is either at his house or here,” Johnson says. “He’s sort of got a boring life.”

    And he doesn’t get much sleep. After evening games back in college, Donald would head straight to Pitt’s D-line office and watch film of the game. Meanwhile, his teammates would be dancing, laughing, drinking into the night at Peter’s Pub off Oakland Ave. As the moon disappeared in the black sky, Donald would pull four of Pitt’s navy-blue office chairs into a single line and make that his bed for the night.
    He is still low-maintenance, hardly resembling his superstar counterparts in the NFL—the bright personalities whose popularity hinges as much on their branding off-field as their play on it.

    Donald is unique not just because there is no one at his size at his position who is as quick or as strong or as powerful (earlier this year, he bench-pressed 500 pounds), but also because he adheres to a concept that is not universally popular or glamorous: Work in silence, and let the results speak for themselves.

    “He will be in the Hall of Fame someday,” Waufle says.

    Donald doesn’t think about that. He doesn’t think about racking up a franchise-record 12.5 sacks in this season’s first 10 games, all while being double-teamed 70 percent of the time, per NFL Next Gen Stats. He doesn’t talk about being the quiet leader of one of the NFL’s loudest teams, either; the one who has the 9-1 Rams fantasizing about a deep run in the playoffs.

    He is still concerned with his missed sacks. “I just feel like I ain’t played my best football yet,” he says.
    Donald wasn’t destined to be a Ram, as the franchise almost missed out on him heading into the 2014 draft. Some people within the Rams’ scouting department were worried that he was undersized. That despite his impressive film, the leverage he was able to create and the lengthy list of national college awards bestowed upon him, he still wasn’t tall enough, big enough.

    Waufle typically coveted big linemen. He spent five years as the Raiders’ defensive line coach under Al Davis, whose teams were big and brutal. But Waufle saw something in Donald that you can’t teach and shouldn’t ignore. Donald was the best defensive lineman he had seen in his 20 years in the NFL. Hell, he was the best player in the draft, Waufle thought.
    Even though the Rams defensive line was already deep and wasn’t in dire need of any new players, Waufle wrote Donald’s name above eventual No. 1 pick Jadeveon Clowney on the team’s mock draft board. Scouting reports be damned.

    About those scouting reports: The word “undersized” was practically superglued to Donald’s name his entire life. He heard the description so often that he became numb to it. That was part of his appeal: He did not keep a running list of his doubters as other slighted prospects might.

    “He had great confidence in himself,” says Paul Chryst, his former Pitt coach, who now coaches at Wisconsin. “He put all his focus and energy on what he could control.”

    Because Donald knew he’d never pass the eye test for a defensive lineman, he didn’t train like one. Starting in high school, he busted through agility cones and ladders and zigged and zagged before flying into endless green. He labored on technique, hand coordination—the small details bigger players might overlook.

    And he couldn’t be contained. Donald was so fast that he used to intercept handoffs before quarterbacks could get the ball to the running back. He’d destroy players who were 6’7″, 300 pounds and were receiving recruiting interest from programs like Michigan and Notre Dame.

    As a senior, Donald had 63 tackles, with 15 for a loss, and 11 sacks. But he received just four scholarship offers. Rivals.com rated him only a 3-star prospect.

    He didn’t talk about it, didn’t whine about it. Donald rolled up his sleeves and went back to work. By the time he arrived at Pitt, he was wrecking offenses so often that his coaches had to pull him out of practice. “He was that disruptive, that impactful,” former Pitt defensive line coach Inoke Breckterfield says.
    “Thank God I never had to go against him,” says Shakir Soto, former Pitt defensive end, now with the Raiders. “He’s a silent assassin.”
    As dominant as Donald was, the doubts about his size persisted until the Rams selected him 13th overall.

    Waufle made sure his first meeting with the rookie was to the point. The strategy for his first year would be simple: let AD be AD.

    “Aaron, don’t listen to one word I say,” Waufle said. “Learn the defensive part of it, but don’t listen to anything technically, fundamentally, physically.

    “You keep playing your game. Just do what you do.”

    The coach had never let a rookie go like that before, but he knew trying to change things could ruin an intuitive player like Donald. It could make him slow down, contemplate every move. The strategy was effective, as he terrorized quarterbacks.

    Donald eventually morphed into the 2017 Defensive Player of the Year. Someone who is unblockable. That’s partially because he rarely wastes movement. He doesn’t move side to side as much as some players do. He accelerates forward so quickly and with such force that offensive linemen are often overwhelmed.

    But few realize that nobody moves like him because few think like him.

    Say there’s a car on the street. A red one. Donald and another defensive lineman are across the street, staring at it. They’re asked to describe what they see. The other lineman might say he’s looking at a red car. Donald, on the other hand, might say the front left tire is ripped, the bumper scratched and the front headlights dimmer than the back ones
    This is how Donald analyzes football film: He obsesses over details and tendencies others might not recognize. Earlier this season, he was dissecting the angle and timing with which a certain guard’s knee twitched. He stared closer, harder, plotting how he might react or even exploit the twitch.

    “He knows more about the offense than they probably know about themselves,” former Pitt defensive end Bryan Murphy says.

    His devotion is obsession. Back in college, Florida State dismantled Pitt 41-13 to open Donald’s senior year. Jameis Winston was commanding in his college debut. Donald had a respectable performance, recording a sack and three tackles, but as soon as Pitt returned to campus, he asked for the game video. He had to know what he did right, and did wrong, that night.

    “That was his fun,” former Pitt defensive end David Durham says. “It’s not like he was trying to beat the guy next to him. He just really loved watching film.”

    Waufle remembers catching Donald in the Rams’ facility parking lot at 6 p.m. on Christmas Day in 2015. He realized then that Donald had been there all day. More film. This didn’t surprise Waufle, though. It used to tick him off when Donald would already be in the D-line office, jotting down notes, at 6 a.m. Waufle had to find a new room to prepare for the day.

    Donald doesn’t do these things just because he wants to “be the best.”

    He just doesn’t want to be beat.

    It’s noticeable when he’s clobbered by double-teams. Some players, when they have little room to maneuver out of a jam, will give up on a play. They’ll jog, maybe run to the ball. But Donald doesn’t allow himself to quit, to ever be completely blocked.
    That’s Pittsburgh again. “That’s the way I was raised,” Donald says.
    As a kid, Donald knew there were certain things he could do and certain things he couldn’t. He couldn’t cheat repetitions, and he couldn’t make excuses. He saw how hard his parents worked, how hard everyone in his Pittsburgh community worked, and he knew he had to work hard, too.

    His father, Archie Donald, worked for a company that recycles tires, and his mother, Anita Goggins, was a bus driver. Archie started working out Aaron and his older brother, Archie, a linebacker who eventually starred at the University of Toledo, at 4:30 a.m. before school. They’d lift weights in the family’s basement as Archie taught them discipline.

    “There was a code of conduct,” former Penn Hills assistant coach Demond Gibson says. “It was the fiber of their family.”

    When Donald wasn’t getting recruited by many colleges, his parents stayed positive. But they also told him he wasn’t owed any offers. “Keep working,” Archie would tell him.

    Donald’s goal, throughout two years of laborious negotiation and holdouts with the Rams, was to ensure his parents did not have to work any longer. So when he received his six-year, $135 million contract extension at the end of August, becoming the highest-paid defensive player in NFL history for 24 hours until Khalil Mack surpassed him, he felt immense gratitude.

    “My family, ain’t no more struggling to pay this bill, pay that bill,” Donald says.

    “If anything, it just motivates me to work a little harder,” he says. “Anytime your organization invests a big amount of money like that into you, you want to do everything and more to thank them.”
    DeWayne Brown, owner of Two Tenths Speed and Agility in Pittsburgh, has been close with Donald since his junior year of high school. Sometimes Brown jokes with Donald about how “big time” he’s gotten, once leaving Donald a voicemail singing Michael Jordan’s classic Gatorade commercial, with one exception: I wanna be, I wanna be, I wanna be like Aaron.

    Donald laughed it off, deflecting the attention. Similarly, Brown says Donald was quiet about the contract extension, feeling relieved and motivated. And something else: “He doesn’t want to disappoint,” Brown says.

    Not just himself, but his team. Until the Rams did. The team’s defense disappeared in a Week 9 loss to the Saints, giving up 45 points and giving Drew Brees free rein. Brees’ 72-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Michael Thomas quelled any hope of a Rams comeback.

    Donald played every defensive snap for the first time in his career, but the Rams’ flawless record now had a blemish. He doesn’t say much about losses, leaving it to his play. Sometimes, though, he speaks up.

    Johnson, the Rams’ defensive line coach, remembers a game last season, which he will not name, when his line spectacularly failed to execute on two plays. He was furious, but just as he was about to tear into the group, Donald stopped him. He told his coach something along the lines of, “Settle down, we’ll fix it,” Johnson says.
    “He was the one that set me straight,” Johnson says. “His composure was better than mine.”
    His teammates watch how he takes responsibility, even if a loss isn’t his fault. They watch how much he agonizes over each missed opportunity. “He motivates me,” Rams defensive end Michael Brockers says. “If I see him coming in here and working, I’m like, ‘OK. I gotta get better, too.’ He’s definitely a guy that pushes you in that way.”

    They also follow him because they like him. And each other. Though the defense gave up a season-high 190 rushing yards in Week 5 to the Seahawks, each of its players seems to like the other despite those moments. It does make a difference—liking the person next to you—when a loss (like the one to the Saints) can spoil a locker room like soured milk.

    That kind of camaraderie translates to the field, to coming back to practice after a loss and starting over as a unit.

    “[Head coach Sean] McVay talks about being yourself,” Suh says. “He’s not going to limit any of us by saying, ‘You have to do it this particular way.’ It’s a team-oriented way.”
    Donald was ready to attack as the Seahawks had the ball with about 20 seconds remaining in a tight Week 10 game.

    He had already been credited with 2.5 sacks of Russell Wilson. The QB has been one of Donald’s favorite targets, as 10 of his 51.5 career sacks have come against him.

    But he wanted more. On second down, he crashed into Wilson, his pressure causing an overthrow.

    After Wilson threw another incompletion on third down, with the outcome of the game hanging in the balance, Donald chased Wilson again, tackling him a split second after he released the ball. He overthrew again, sealing the Rams’ 36-31 victory.
    Afterward, knowing Donald, it’s easy to imagine him in the film room obsessing more over those two sacks he missed than the 2.5 he made.

    Whatever it takes, he doesn’t want to be beat.

    #94332
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    #94351
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    #94414
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    #94496
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    #94615
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    Baldinger discusses Donald starting at 1:45

    #94624
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    this may have been posted but i didnt see it:

    #94629
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    this may have been posted but i didnt see it:

    After games I always start a thread that’s about both highlights and play breakdowns. This begins with Donald and so certainly fits here, but it could have gone to that one too, since it also does a Rams TD pass. Here’s the Chiefs game version of that: http://theramshuddle.com/topic/highlights-chiefs-game-2/

    #94681
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    #94796
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    Donald’s Outrageous Play Making a Case for MVP

    https://www.therams.com/news/donald-s-outrageous-play-making-a-case-for-mvp

    ==

    Aaron Donald’s NFL MVP candidacy deserves to be taken seriously

    Vincent Bonsignore

    https://theathletic.com/689392/2018/12/02/aaron-donalds-nfl-mvp-candidacy-deserves-to-be-taken-seriously/

    DETROIT​ — Jared Goff​ trusts his football​ knowledge​ enough to​ know​ he is​ seeing​ something​ unique,​ something special, in​ Aaron Donald,​​ the Rams’ human wrecking ball whose ferocity on defense has been so dominant and so influential that there is no longer a justifiable reason to keep him out of the discussion for the NFL’s Most Valuable Player award.
    In an era where the game has been constructed and adjudicated to allow offenses to thrive more than ever, the best player in football is Donald, a defensive tackle who stands a shade over six foot and who fitly carries around his 285 pounds in a way that makes him seem small compared to the mammoths he lines up alongside and against.
    Yet, as Donald showed once again on Sunday by coming up with huge plays to lead the Rams to a 30-16 win over the Detroit Lions — a victory that secured a second straight NFC West Division title and a one-game lead over the New Orleans Saints for home-field advantage throughout the playoffs — he is the biggest giant in his sport right now.
    “You talk about a guy that … man, he’s a freak,” Rams wide receiver Brandin Cooks told The Athletic. “It’s kind of like words can’t explain it.”
    Donald is, hands down, the single most destructive player in the game. And he makes his presence felt by playing an interior defensive line position for which double teams are a way of life and creating pressure on the quarterback is supposed to be the exception not the norm.
    Donald has racked up a league-leading 16.5 sacks, forced four fumbles (two of which he recovered), thrown 20 ball carriers for losses and hit the quarterback 32 times.
    “Dominant,” marveled Rams outside linebacker Dante Fowler Jr. “You can’t stop him.”
    Goff, in his football heart, knows all of this. He has seen it over and over again whether by lining up against Donald in practice or watching in awe from the sidelines during games as Donald single-handedly destroys opposing offenses.
    But on those frequent afternoons Donald is in an especially havoc-wreaking mood by splitting double teams, bull-rushing guards, demolishing tackles and throwing around quarterbacks and running backs like they were rag dolls, Goff will find affirmation from somebody a little more in the know.
    Just to be sure his instincts aren’t betraying him, Goff will usually seek out the head judge of the referee crew and, as Goff tells it, casually ask: “How’s No. 99 look?” The answer never disappoints.
    “They’ll be like … ‘He’s the best I’ve ever seen,’ ” Goff said.
    Sunday was one of those days.
    The Rams were stuck in second gear offensively against the undermanned Lions and, as a result, Detroit stuck around way longer than expected. The Lions trailed 16-13 with just under 10 minutes remaining and had possession of the ball with a chance to take the lead.
    Donald decided enough was enough. On first down from the Lions’ 42-yard line, he chased down quarterback Matthew Stafford for a sack and, while taking him to the ground, managed to jog the ball loose for a fumble that the Rams recovered at the Detroit 24. Three plays later, Todd Gurley rumbled 13 yards for a touchdown to put the Rams up 23-13 and essentially wrap up the division crown.
    On the Rams sideline, center John Sullivan walked up to offensive line coach Aaron Kromer and said: “Aaron Donald is a nightmare for an offense.”
    Sullivan is absolutely right. And it’s high time we stopped qualifying what Donald is doing by limiting the scope to one side of the ball.
    The truth is, the sheer dominance Donald is displaying is altering entire games. His five tackles, two sacks, one forced fumble and three tackles for losses on Sunday certainly did.
    “I’ve never played with a guy like that,” Rams cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman said. “And yes, he should be applauded and rewarded to the highest degree of awards.”
    “The way he rushes the quarterback. The way he plays the run. The way he demands a double team. I mean, every single game you have to be aware of where he is,” Sullivan told The Athletic. “He wrecks games. He changes momentum frequently.
    “For an interior player who’s getting double-teamed as much as he is, for him to be leading the league in sacks is just … that’s unheard of. I’ve never heard of that in over a decade of playing in the NFL. I’ve never seen a guy that just dominates a game, every game, as consistently as he is.”
    Which is why he should be given serious consideration for MVP. Of course, doing that means voters bucking the trend of giving the award to offensive players.
    The last five MVPs were quarterbacks, and you’d have to go all the way back to 1986 to find the last defensive player to win the award. That would be New York Giants legend Lawrence Taylor. Before that, Vikings defensive end Alan Page won it in 1971.
    Taylor and Page are the only two defensive players to have won league MVP, which has been around since 1957. With the season Donald is putting together, he just might join them.
    “Strip sacks. Big tackles for loss,” marveled Rams safety John Johnson. “Sometimes we get in a bad situation on second down and he makes up for it by getting a tackle for a loss. It’s crazy.”
    “I know everyone likes to see touchdowns and all that good stuff,” Fowler Jr. said. “But you have to look at the other side of the ball and see what Aaron Donald’s been doing all season.”
    Of Donald’s 16.5 sacks, 11.5 have come in the second half of games and 7.5 have occurred in the fourth quarter. That’s typically the time when teams close out games.
    “He’s forcing turnovers. He’s getting there at the most important times,” Rams head coach Sean McVay said. “And that’s what we talk about all the time, that competitive greatness. Being your best when your best is required and he’s kind of the epitome of that right now for our defense and really a guy that represents that for our football team.”
    Donald has been especially good on third downs to force opponents off the field or make them settle for field goals. He has racked up 7.5 of his sacks on those money downs that typically change the course of games.
    “And how many of those are sack fumbles that we recovered the ball?” Sullivan said. “It’s huge. And he does it at the biggest times of the game.”
    Isn’t altering and affecting and sometimes dictating the outcome of games the very essence of an MVP?
    “My mind is like that every game, I want to make that big play every play,” Donald said. “Big-time players make big-time plays in big-time games. That is what we need to keep doing. Many guys are doing it, if you have a lot of guys flying around making plays, you get good things out of it.”
    The Rams are definitely getting contributions across the board. Goff and Gurley also warrant MVP consideration. The Rams are an NFL-best 11-1 and control their own destiny for home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. There are a handful of reasons why they sit atop the NFL.
    But with each victory and each dominant performance, Donald has rightfully forced his way into the discussion. And it’s time his MVP candidacy is taken more seriously.
    “There’s certain players who have a dramatic effect and he’s one of those guys,” Rams left tackle Andrew Whitworth told The Athletic. “Much like a quarterback or a receiver or running back that you talk about in the MVP conversation. He has had some games where he’s had to have a moment and he’s won the game for us.”

    #94798
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    *

    Just to be sure his instincts aren’t betraying him, Goff will usually seek out the head judge of the referee crew and, as Goff tells it, casually ask: “How’s No. 99 look?” The answer never disappoints.
    “They’ll be like … ‘He’s the best I’ve ever seen,’ ” Goff said.

    *

    Sullivan told The Athletic. “He wrecks games…For an interior player who’s getting double-teamed as much as he is, for him to be leading the league in sacks is just … that’s unheard of. I’ve never heard of that in over a decade of playing in the NFL. I’ve never seen a guy that just dominates a game, every game, as consistently as he is.”

    We’re running out of ways to praise this guy.

    #94801
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
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    We’re running out of ways to praise this guy.

    he’s alright.

    #94802
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    #94843
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    #94844
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
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    just to be contrarian one might argue that donald plays in an era where there is more passing than ever before so are those sack numbers inflated?

    on the other hand he’s pretty damn good against the run too with all those tackles for losses.

    #94894
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    JB Long

    https://www.facebook.com

    On the flight home from Detroit, I decided to do a quick study of Aaron Donald’s NFL-leading 16.5 sacks. From our standpoint, it feels like he’s not just imposing his will, but he’s wrecking opposing offenses at the most critical moments of games.
    Here’s what I came up with:
    -Opponents have a total of one subsequent first down on drives in which he recorded a sack (and it was because of a personal foul against Seattle).
    -Opponents have zero touchdowns on drives in which he recorded a sack.
    -12 of his sacks have occurred in the second half.
    -Eight of his sacks have occurred in the fourth quarter.
    -Eight of his sacks have occurred on third down.
    -14 of his sacks have (a) forced a fumble recovered by the Rams, (b) led to a turnover on that same set of downs, or (c) led to a punt on that same set of downs.
    -Two of his sacks have immediately forced a field goal try.
    As for his four forced fumbles:
    -All four have been recovered by the Rams (including one recovered by Donald, himself).
    -All have led to Rams touchdowns (either on the fumble recovery or the ensuing offensive possession).
    -Three of his forced fumbles occurred on first down plays for the opposition.
    He’s also leading the league with 20 tackles for loss, showing up just as prominently in run defense.
    And here’s a final trend, courtesy of the Rams P.R. department: The Rams are undefeated (16-0) in the Sean McVay / Wade Phillips era when Donald records a sack.

    #94896
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    #94897
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    #94898
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    Agamemnon

    #94904
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    aeneas1

    the only thing missing is a cape with a giant “s” on it… this guy just isn’t human.

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