Fisher, 11/2 … transcript

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Rams Huddle Fisher, 11/2 … transcript

Viewing 5 posts - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #33416
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams Head Coach Jeff Fisher –– 11/2/15

    (On getting to work on the things he wanted to work on today)
    “Yeah, we modified the Monday. They came in. Everybody came in. They kind of watched it on their own. So, the coaches are…we got an opportunity to look at the tape in detail and then got an earlier start on our next week’s opponent. So, that looks good. Tape was good. There was a lot of good things in the tape. There was a lot of things that we need to improve. It’s just like any other coach that stands up on Monday after a game, win or loss, is you had some good things and you’ve got some things you’ve got to get better at. Good things: defensive play. Unfortunately, we didn’t get any turnovers. But, we got off the field on third down, tackled well, pressured the quarterback well and played the run pretty well. Offensively, the run game got going in the second half. But, third down is an issue. I thought special teams guys played well. (P) Johnny (Hekker) misshit one kick and they had a decent return. But, beyond that, he was placing it really well. Field position was good. We played with a lot of energy on special teams.

    “The two glaring things, the two errors that we must improve on is our third down on offense and reducing the number of penalties. We had nine last week and 12 this week. That’s too many penalties. We had seven defensive offsides in the last two weeks and that’s at home. As we start playing good teams on the road here, we’re going to have to learn from that and play with more discipline up front on the defensive line. Offensive holdings and some of those things we’ve got to get corrected. The third down thing is this: the statistics show that we’ve converted two first downs in the last two games in 21 attempts. Realistically speaking, I’ll subtract four of those because we had one where we ran it with the intention of kicking the field goal. Then, we had three where the offense was instructed to run it in the four-minute situation. Still two-for-16 or two-for-17 is not good. We had two third-and-14s and 15 and 17 and 18 which are hard to convert. But still, you look at those numbers closely, we’ve got to do much better there. We can’t win games, especially at this time of the year, where we’re not converting third downs on offense. That’s just a matter of practice. Our approach to it, doing a better job against man coverage. We didn’t give up any sacks which was good. The pocket was clean. (QB) Nick (Foles) had time. His deep throws were accurate. Again, it’s nice to have discussions with the staff and the players over the last two weeks when you score 51 points and you give up 12 and you’re being very, very, should I say, ‘constructively criticized.’ And we want to get better. That’s what this is about.”

    (On the instruction that changed to throw the quick pitch to WR Tavon Austin instead of run the ball)
    “Well that wasn’t a run. We’ve been running the ball effectively and we just had a sense that…what’s happening is with (RB) Todd’s (Gurley’s) production and then Tavon’s production outside with the sweeps and things like that, defenses are kind of constricting. So, when you create the one-on-ones outside, you need to take advantage of that. You really need one block. You get one block to get the play started. Then, our guys did a good job down field. So, we have to continue to utilize that play because it’s an additional way of getting the ball in Tavon’s hands.”

    (On if he’s concerned with the dropped passes during the game)
    “No, I mean, the guys are…they don’t drop the ball on purpose. If it keeps happening, you have to start making changes. But, I’m not concerned. The guys are practicing well. They’re catching the ball consistently in games. They’ve become more glaring in close games. Obviously, (WR) Kenny’s (Britt) was a huge play. It was a huge opportunity for a big field position change and then (WR) Tavon’s (Austin), which in essence they considered a fumble, was is kind of in between. It was a fumble-drop. Obviously, we have to do a better job of that. But, it’s not an epidemic right now.”

    (On if he thought Austin had possession of the ball before he fumbled it)
    “They did apparently, yeah. Yeah, it was kind of that bang-bang thing. They usually call incomplete, but they felt like he had possession. Apparently, he must’ve done an act associated with the game. Turn up field or do something where they considered it a fumble.”

    (On if he thinks his team is mature enough to not be satisfied with the success they’ve had thus far)
    “Their mood after the game was good. They weren’t…I mean, you’ve been in a lot of different locker rooms after wins and been in locker rooms after losses. Just was not an overtime victory against Seattle in the opener type of feeling in the locker room. This was, ‘Okay, we got through it. We won it, but we have to play much better.’ I mean, I think that’s the sign of a team that’s moving forward that understands that it has potential. It has opportunities, but you can’t be satisfied.”

    (On if he would call his defense the ‘Jeff Fisher defense’ where it’s the kind of defense that he likes and has tried to get with all of his teams)
    “I was teasing (Rams Defensive Coordinator) Gregg (Williams) this morning. I wouldn’t have left the receiver uncovered out there inside the 10 yard line when I was coordinating defenses. (laughs) So, that’s on Gregg, not me. But, we’re getting there. The thing I like about the defense right now is that (LB) Alec Ogletree was playing really good football. We’ve been able to not replace him but get by. (S) Mark’s (Barron) playing really good ball right now, as is (LB) Akeem (Ayers). He made a lot of plays. So, we’re plugging and play. When (DL) Ethan (Westbrooks) comes in, there’s no drop off. (DT) Nick’s (Fairley) playing good right now. When he comes in to substitute for the tackles, there’s no drop off. (DE) Will (Hayes) stepped up in (DE) Chris’s (Long) absence and (DE) Eugene (Sims) can play when (DE) Rob’s (Quinn) not in. So, we’ve got depth. When we’re moving people around, we’re still getting the production. (CB) Tru (Johnson) comes off for one play and again, (CB) Marcus (Roberson) comes in for one play and makes the play. (S) T.J.’s (McDonald) out for two or three and (S) Maurice (Alexander) makes two or three really solid tackles. So, the depth is showing up and that’s a tribute to Gregg and his staff and what they’re doing on the field and preparing everybody from top to bottom to go out and just to be prepared to go out and play when called upon.”

    (On if the depth he has at defense now is something maybe he didn’t have two years ago)
    “We didn’t have it. No, I don’t think we did. We do now. Guys that haven’t had a chance to play many snaps or any snaps on defense, for example, like (S) Cody Davis. No reservations whatsoever of Cody going in and playing defense for us based on what he’s doing on special teams and what I’ve seen on the practice field. So, we’re good. It’s just somebody goes down for a few minutes or for a series, somebody goes in and there’s no drop off. So, it’s not like you’re concerned about him or you have to protect him or you’re concerned about an offense attacking that position.”

    (On what he’s seen in the consistency of the defense’s tackling)
    “The tackling’s been good the last couple of weeks, the open field tackling. Not only has it been good, but there’s contact. That’s what we like. Guys are using really good angles. They know where their help is. Because of that, they’re able to really fire. When they do, there’s contact. There’s a lot of contact out there, but we haven’t had any big misses. We’re asking the corners to do a lot outside – a lot of man-to-man, a lot of one-on-one stuff. When the ball’s caught, boom. The receiver’s down. We haven’t had any make you miss type things and big plays down the sideline.”

    (On what he would like to see the defense do better)
    “Like I said yesterday, ‘12 points in two weeks is too many.’ That’s the approach you have to take from a defensive standpoint. You strive to play that perfect game. So, we had balls flying around, bouncing around. We had DB’s breaking. (CB) Janoris (Jenkins) in two instances was breaking on balls. He read routes and the balls were deflected or knocked down or he’s going the other direction with it. So, those are things that we look at as positives, as potential big plays on the defense that hopefully will continue.”

    (On what ways he thinks RB Todd Gurley can be better)
    “Well, we have to be better around him. We have to block better for him earlier in the game. I mean, we’re doing a good job offensively making adjustments based on defensive schemes and things like that and approaches, defensive approaches to our run game. We’re adjusting. So, we’re getting those creases, changing the run game ever so slightly. But, we need to do a better job early in the game with the run. You saw it. It was two yards or three yards or one yard, a tackle for loss, then all of sudden we hit a crease and things start to open up for us. Then, he gets the game-breaker.”

    (On if he’s seeing production from Gurley that he didn’t expect to see early on)
    “No, I mean everybody game plans. Defenses game plan, you base it on formations and things like that and personnel group. So, you have to get a sense for what they’re doing. Then, you adjust.”

    (On Gurley not being a finished product and if he thinks he’ll get better in terms of what he sees by being on the field more)
    “Yeah, I mean, one would think because of where he is, probably a year off the injury right now, that in time he’s going to become more and more explosive. But, so far so good.”

    (On if he thinks the offensive line got better as the game went on yesterday as far as the run game)
    “I think they adjusted well, yeah. I thought they pass protected well in a sense. But, keep in mind that in an effort to be realistic, the 49ers are very well-coached. (49ers Defensive Coordinator) Eric Mangini is a good defensive football coach. They’re not real sophisticated. They beat you with consistency. So, we, for the most part knew what to expect. It’s not a complicated scheme. So, you should get production out of your offensive line when the complication level is a little bit lower, and it came as the game went on. I thought both tackles did a decent job with the edge rushers. We were decent inside passing off the inside games. (RB) Benny (Cunningham) is as good as there is in protection. You’re going to have to look hard around the league to find a back that’s better than Benny Cunningham when a linebacker’s rushing him.”

    (On how he thinks G Garrett Reynolds is working out with T Greg Robinson on the left side)
    “Garrett’s playing well. Playing solid. He’s finishing plays, getting down field, doing all those kind of things. I think he’s had a good impact on Greg. Greg’s been a little inconsistent at times. That’s just the nature of that position. Left tackle’s a hard position to play. So, I think Garrett’s been a good influence on him.”

    (On why T Rob Havenstein went out late in the game)
    “Well, we wanted to get (T) Darrell (Williams) some reps, and good question. Rob was a little banged up. Yeah, he went in the game with a…he had a little flare up with his Achilles on Saturday. So, he was fine. We worked him out. He kind of woke up with it Saturday, so he was fine finishing. But, it was good to get Darrell in there.”

    (On if he has any concern about the concrete on the sideline when he’s coaching)
    “Let me just say this, there’s been hundreds of games here and they haven’t had any issues with it. I don’t know whether it was different before I got here, but it’s been consistent. The organization, we have had discussions with the NFL league office and game office department to see if there’s something we can do. But, this is their deal. This is kind of out of my deal. But, player safety is of the utmost importance. We don’t want to have any issues. I’m not saying that it’s a coincidence that we’ve had…at least it’s been implied that we’ve had several issues here the last couple of weeks. We’re going to do whatever we need to do to make sure that we don’t have an issue with it.”

    (On if he’s coached his players to be cognizant of the cement)
    “Never been an issue before. Not aware of it.”

    (On if he talked to the league office about it)
    “I didn’t talk to the league office. The organization has talked to the league office to discuss and see if there’s anything that we can do.”

    (On if other stadiums have the same set-up)
    “Many other stadiums have the same issue.”

    (On if the solution is simply putting something over the concrete)
    “You know, to be honest with you, I really haven’t had time to get involved in that issue itself. Kevin (Demoff) and the guys were talking to the league office. I’ve been more into our team and Minnesota. I’ll keep you abreast since they’re not commenting. I’ll keep you abreast as to what’s going on. Again, player safety is the most important thing we’re dealing with here.”

    (On how he assess the change in the weekly schedule now that they’re midway through the season)
    “From a player feedback and player standpoint, they love it. The Thursday, what we’re doing on Thursday is really good for them because they’re able to recover that much closer to the game. We’re doing a little bit more on Saturday. So, the feedback from the player standpoint is great. The coaches were a little apprehensive initially, but by Week 2, they really liked it. It gives them a chance to regroup on Thursday and look at what we’ve got in and change things. Thursday ends up being a really productive day for the staff because we don’t have player-coaches interaction. We’ve had 100 percent attendance on Thursdays, on their day off. They’re getting together on their own and watching tape because the gameplan is in. So far, so good. Obviously, we’ll have to modify it this week because of daylight savings time. We’ll move things up an hour earlier tomorrow, just so we don’t have to practice in the dark.”

    (On if he’s heard from other coaches for his opinion on the schedule)
    “No, it’s the first time I’ve talked about it publically I think, so we probably will.”

    (On what he was told by the referees on the RB Benny Cunningham fumble play and why the team got the ball back)
    “It was a loose ball and there was a personal foul. Obviously, it was the right call. They felt that Benny had a chance to recover that ball. We got the personal foul and loose ball, so they gave us the ball at the spot and enforced the penalty.”

    (On if the 49ers would have kept the ball, had they had possession at the time of the facemask)
    “They could’ve given the ball, had possession taken place before the facemask. A post-possession foul versus a, you don’t like to say pre-possession because we had possession, but we had a loose ball. A post-possession foul probably would’ve given them the ball.”

    (On what it is about RB Todd Gurley’s personality that allows him to handle the success at 21 years old)
    “He loves ball. He really likes his teammates. That’s what he’s about. He’s about winning football games and trying to contribute.”

    (On subbing S Maurice Alexander in for S T.J. McDonald and if he can elaborate anything more on that decision)
    “No, it’s just some things we had to get straight with respect to what they were doing offensively. T.J. showed up. He showed how much he appreciated it on that kickoff coverage tackle.”

    #33417
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Is ut just me, or are these interviews getting better? It’s interesting, when they’re a losing team, JF tends to be more upbeat, because, I think, the message he sends the team is “keep working and buy in.” When they’re winning and have a chance to do more, he becomes much more serious, and you get this sense that he wants to keep them focused. The result is a much more balanced approach.

    #33420
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Note: this article is essentially just a summary of the press conference so I put it here.

    Monday Wrap-Up: What’s Working on Defense

    Myles Simmons

    http://www.stlouisrams.com/news-and-events/article-1/Monday-Wrap-Up-Whats-Working-on-Defense/7f665614-58a0-4dfb-b39e-1ee95c726504

    The Rams have completed two consecutive performances in which they’ve allowed only six points. That’s not easy to do in the NFL, where only five of 32 teams are averaging under 20.0 points per game.

    Following Sunday’s 27-6 win over San Francisco, St. Louis’ defense in now among the league’s top 10 in points per game (No. 4), sacks (tied for No. 2), total yards per game (No. 6), rushing yards per game (No. 9), and passing yards per game (No. 10). The unit is also No. 1 in red zone scoring percentage.

    “Unfortunately we didn’t get any turnovers, but we got off the field on third down, tackled well, pressured the quarterback well, and played the run pretty well,” head coach Jeff Fisher said Monday.

    “San Fran had a drive where they drove the ball a little bit and got in the red zone and we stopped them. That’s a momentum booster for us,” defensive tackle Michael Brockers said Sunday. “We feel like when the field gets smaller and shrinks that no one should score on us, because we have good red-zone defense. We don’t want people scoring on us.”

    One of the reasons why the defense has been so effective is its depth. Fisher pointed to how the Rams have been able to withstand the significant injury to linebacker Alec Ogletree as an example of how well coordinator Gregg Williams has led the unit.

    “Alec Ogletree was playing really good football. And we’ve been able to, not replace him, but get by,” Fisher said. “Mark [Barron is] playing really good ‘ball right now, as is Akeem [Ayers.]

    “The depth is showing up,” Fisher continued. “And that’s a tribute to Gregg and the staff and what they’re doing on the field, preparing everybody from top to bottom just to be prepared to go out and play when called upon.”

    According to linebacker James Laurinaitis, the biggest key has just been the unit playing smart, disciplined football. Players are trusting their teammates, and not trying to do anything outside of their assignment.

    “Plays come to you instead of you just chasing them,” Laurinaitis said on Sunday. “We’ve just been practicing well, we have a good vibe going when we meet together. And guys are just worried about Ws instead of individual statistics.”

    That’s part of why Laurinaitis said he thinks there’s been a different sort of mentality around the team this year.

    “It feels different. During the week, it even felt different,” Laurinaitis said. “The way people approach practice, the way they went about their work. Maybe in years past, you’d have to try to chase guys down after a win to keep the same routine. Now you don’t have to.”

    Brockers had a similar assessment, saying defensive preparation has been even more on point this season than before.

    “It’s how hard we work,” Brockers said. “We don’t take any days off. We are trying to make plays so it can transfer over to the game.

    “I think it shows how prepared and good this team is,” Brockers continued. “We have a lot of young guys, but we still feel we can make things happen. Everyone is taking initiative to get it right and get it rolling.”

    Laurinaitis said the shift may stem from the fact that while the team is still young, everyone now knows just how hard it is to get wins in the league.

    “We’ve been trying to chip at this thing for a while, and kind of keep swinging away, swinging away,” Laurinaitis said. “And so you have a lot of guys who are more experienced and more mature, and they realize it now.”

    That’s why the longtime Rams’ middle linebacker was, as he put it, cautiously optimistic the gut feeling he had heading into Sunday was correct.

    “You don’t want to be like, ‘Oh yeah, this is going to be different,’ and then come out here and lay an egg,” Laurinaitis said. “The really good teams — something that we have the capability to be if we want — … will rattle off wins back, to back, to back, to back and stack them.”

    Now, the Rams don’t want to just maintain the same level of play in order to continue getting victories — they want to elevate it. That’s why Fisher said it’s not enough to just hold opponents to 12 points over the last two games.

    “That’s the approach you have to take from a defensive standpoint,” Fisher said. “You strive to play that perfect game.”

    IMPROVING ON THIRD DOWN

    After Sunday’s victory, St. Louis offense is now just 2-of-21 on third down over the last two games. It’s a glaring stat, and Fisher said the team simply has not been good enough in those situations.

    “Third down is an issue,” Fisher said. “You look at those numbers closely, we’ve got to do much better there. We can’t win games — especially at this time of year — when we’re not converting third downs on offense. That’s just a matter of practice.”

    As for the drops, Fisher said he’s not too concerned about them at this point. But it’s another area in which St. Louis must improve.

    “Guys don’t drop the ball on purpose,” Fisher said. “If it keeps happening, then you’ve got to start making changes. But I’m not concerned. The guys are practicing well.”

    “Obviously, we’ve got to do a better job with that,” Fisher added. “But it’s not an epidemic right now.”

    What’s nice about the last couple weeks, however, is that the Rams have been able to go over corrections after wins rather than losses.

    “It’s nice to have discussions with the staff and the players over the last two weeks when you’ve scored 51 points and you give up 12, and you’re being very, very constructively criticized,” Fisher said. “We want to get better. That’s what this is about.”

    #33463
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Note:another article that is essentially just a summary of the press conference so I put it here too.


    Fisher wants Rams to keep grinding

    Jim Thomas

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/fisher-wants-rams-to-keep-grinding/article_7292ecd9-1d3f-53f4-b075-54cc53d5ad55.html

    The Rams’ 27-6 victory against San Francisco had been over for maybe 15 minutes, and already coach Jeff Fisher was looking ahead.

    “Yeah, I can’t wait to get back to work in the morning,” Fisher said Sunday. “As a matter of fact, we’re gonna give some players a little bit of extra time off tomorrow so we can dig deep into it as a staff, just to try to make more plays.”

    So the players came in Monday and watched the San Francisco tape on their own, which allowed the coaching staff to get an earlier start than usual on this week’s opponent — Minnesota.

    Fisher has been around long enough to realize this Rams team has an opportunity to put something together this season. The last thing he wants is for the team to feel self-satisfied after back-to-back wins over Cleveland and San Francisco by a combined score of 51-12.

    So the emphasis these days at Rams Park is more constructive criticism than patting each other on the back.

    “We want to get better,” Fisher said. “That’s what this is about.”

    He doesn’t want a repeat of last season, when the Rams posted back-to-back shutouts of Oakland and Washington, only to lose their final three games of 2014 to finish 6-10.

    Three times in 2013, the team won back-to-back games only to stumble the following week. In fact, in Fisher’s three-plus seasons in St. Louis, the team has won as many as three games only once, winning at Arizona, at home against San Francisco, and at Buffalo in Games 11-13 of the 2012 campaign.

    As the players say, the idea is to stack wins together. As many as possible.

    “The thing for us is we can’t be content,” tight end and fullback Cory Harkey said. “Obviously, we know we can get better. So we’ve just got to come back to work, and we’ve gotta get the next one. We’ve gotta get three in a row. That’s all we can worry about right now.”

    The players barely paused to reflect on the fact that at 4-3, they were above .500 in November for the first time since 2006. The mood was more

    ”we’ve got a lot to work on”

    rather than

    ”we’ve come a long way.”

    “And I appreciate that, because it just shows this team is growing,” defensive tackle Michael Brockers said. “So many times in the past years, we’d look at a win — we’d be so high on that win, we’d end up not focusing on the game ahead.”

    But the past two Sundays, the postgame vibe in the locker room has been telling, and Fisher has taken notice.

    “This was not an overtime victory against Seattle in the opener type of feeling in the locker room,” Fisher said Sunday. “This was, ‘OK, we got through it. We won it. But we gotta play much better.’ I think that’s the sign of a team that’s moving forward and understands that it has potential, it has opportunities, but you can’t be satisfied.”

    In this week-to-week league, there’s always another Sunday to prove yourselves. The test next Sunday in TCF Bank Stadium is daunting against a 5-2 Minnesota team that embarrassed the Rams 34-6 at the Edward Jones Dome in the 2014 season opener.

    The two areas of greatest concern for Fisher coming out of the San Francisco game were third-down conversions on offense — or lack thereof — and penalties.

    The Rams went one for 12 on third downs against the 49ers, are two for 21 over their past two games, and now rank dead last in the NFL in third-down conversion rate at 25.9 percent.

    “Realistically speaking, I would subtract four of those, because we had one where we ran it with the intention of kicking the field goal,” Fisher said. “And then we had three where the offense was instructed to run it in the 4-minute (drain-the-clock) situation. Still, two for 17’s not good.

    “We can’t win games, especially at this time of year, when we’re not completing third downs on offense.”

    As for penalties, they’ve historically been a bugaboo for Fisher-coached teams. Penalties are up throughout the league this season, so the Rams’ numbers aren’t as bad as one might think. They’re tied for 13th in penalties assessed (56), and 21st in penalty yardage assessed (431).

    Keep in mind, however, several teams with more penalties and more penalty yards have yet to have their bye week.

    Nonetheless, 12 penalties for 93 yards against San Francisco is too much. So was nine penalties for 75 yards against Cleveland.

    “We’ve got seven defensive offsides in the last two weeks, and that’s at home,” Fisher said. “So as we start playing good teams on the road here, we’re gonna have to learn from that, and play with more discipline up front on the defensive line.”

    While third-down efficiency and penalties are the top agenda items, Fisher also would like to run the ball better early with Todd Gurley.

    “We’ve gotta block better for him earlier in the game,” Fisher said. “You saw it, it was two yards or three yards, or one yard, or a tackle for a loss. And then all of a sudden, we hit a crease and things start to open up for us, and then (Gurley) gets the game-breaker.”

    A more productive running game in the first quarter should lead to faster starts on the scoreboard as well. The Rams have scored only 19 points in the first quarter this season; only Philadelphia (10), San Francisco (12), and Jacksonville (16) have scored fewer.

    And nine of those 19 Rams points have come directly from the St. Louis defense: Sunday’s safety against San Francisco and Rodney McLeod’s scoop-and-score on a Cleveland fumble a week earlier.

    #33472
    Avatar photowv
    Participant
Viewing 5 posts - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

Comments are closed.