Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › articles on Goff, including Manning & Silver on JG
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January 29, 2019 at 2:48 am #97431znModerator
From blocking out crowd noise to making big-time throws, Manning talks Goff
Jeff Legwold
At 24 years old, Los Angeles Rams quarterback Jared Goff will be one of the youngest ever to start a Super Bowl at the position when he meets the New England Patriots on Sunday in Atlanta.
Including what was a rocky start his rookie year, Goff has already started 38 games in three seasons. He has two 3,800-yard-plus passing seasons and his team has won 11 and 13 games, respectively, over the past two regular seasons.
The Rams’ victory over the New Orleans Saints in the NFC Championship Game is the focus of the latest installment of the ESPN+ show Detail with Peyton Manning.
Here’s a quick recap of Manning’s breakdown of Goff:
Deal with it
Manning opened the evaluation with the skull-crushing crowd noise inside the Superdome that Goff had to deal with, including taping over the ear holes in his helmet — something the Saints’ defenders, specifically linebacker Alex Anzalone, pointed out.
“The crowd noise was definitely a factor. … You try to simulate it in practice with speakers, nothing quite simulates the real environment of being on the road, especially in an NFC Championship Game,’’ Manning said.
Peyton Manning: Detail | Goff & Brady
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Manning showed Goff’s options to vary the snap count as well as how taxing it is for a quarterback and the offensive linemen to simply get the ball from the center to the quarterback when no one on the offense can hear any cadence.Manning pointed out the silent count — Goff using his hands to signal to the linemen, with the guard tapping the center’s leg — the “double silent count’’ and the occasional “quick count,’’ when the Rams simply snapped the ball as soon as they lined up, with Goff using a quick “set, go.’’
“I guarantee you Jared and these offensive linemen were emotionally drained after this game because of all the energy and effort that goes into communicating the snap count before the actual ball is snapped and the play is even run,’’ Manning said.
He said Goff’s ability to vary things, even that loud of an environment, was like a “pitcher working the changeup.”
Night fever
Manning showed how the Rams’ use of a simple route, when the receiver cuts in and then bounces back outside, or the other way around, could still keep the Saints off balance.
Manning said some call it a “burger” route, but that it was often a “disco’’ route when he played.
“The burger route, the In-N-Out burger,’’ Manning said. “Kind of a return route, we called it a disco, don’t really know why, we had disco, we had Travolta, all kind of things in the ‘Saturday Night Fever’ thing.’’
As simple a concept as it is, Manning said it was still “a lot for Saints to think about.’’
Don’t call it arm talent
They are two words Manning has long said he hates and won’t say when talking about quarterbacks — psst, the phrase is “arm talent’’ — but he dialed in plenty on Goff’s accuracy on a deep ball to Brandin Cooks just before halftime.
It was a throw up the left sideline, which Goff put in the perfect spot for a 36-yard gain. The Rams scored on a 6-yard touchdown run by Todd Gurley on the following play, with just 23 seconds remaining in the first half as the Rams cut the Saints’ lead to 13-10.
Manning showed how the ball placement by Goff was the most important part of the play.
“Call this a big box fade, we want to widen out, get out there to that kind of box where we want to complete that ball,’’ Manning said. “All go routes … most of these go routes should be completed four yards from the sideline, from the sideline and the numbers, that’s exactly where it was completed.’’
Manning added: “Great execution … Jared throws it in a perfect spot … big-time throw there.’’
In his third season, quarterback Jared Goff has helped the Rams to their first Super Bowl since 2002. Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images
Hands onThe little things matter to Manning, who reminds quarterbacks what they do with their hands before they have the ball is as important as anything else — whether that’s tipping the snap count by how a quarterback positions his hands when in the shotgun or how the quarterback plays under center.
This time, Manning pointed out how Goff rushed one of the Rams’ quick-count snaps.
It was nearly a fumble at the Saints’ 1-yard line, but the ball bounced back up to Goff, who fell on it at the 3-yard line.
“That’s the only tendency with a quick count, you can pull your hands out from center too quickly or the center maybe rushes the snap and every now and then you get this fumbled exchange,’’ Manning said. “I’ve talked about this before; one fumbled exchange is one too many. … Stay in there, quarterbacks … we can’t have a fumbled snap.’’
Manning said this could become an issue in the Super Bowl given the number of new footballs the league uses in the title game — “all shiny and with the logos.’’
Manning also pointed out a near-fumble on a handoff from Goff to C.J. Anderson in overtime.
That’s the one
Manning took a moment to show what happens when a playcall, coupled with quarterback accuracy, gets the exact look from a defense to work well.
It was a 33-yard completion from Goff to wide receiver Josh Reynolds. The play moved the ball to the Saints’ 7-yard line, and four plays later the Rams tied the game 20-20 with a 24-yard field goal by Greg Zuerlein.
“Certain plays that you call you hope you get a certain coverage, and when you do, boy your eyes get wide you get so excited,’’ Manning said.
Manning called it a “a great playcall’’ against a three-deep zone with a “post route with a wheel route behind it.’’
Be an amphibian
Manning discussed a throw on the first play of overtime for the Rams’ offense, when Goff showed his ability to be what Manning has consistently joked about through the years — “amphibious,’’ a frequent nod to a high school coach Manning has said would substitute the word “amphibious” for “ambidextrous.”
The play was a 12-yard completion from Goff to tight end Tyler Higbee.
“Ball in his left hand, flips it to his right hand, flips his hips, makes a sidearm throw, accurate, on the run for his tight end to get some yards after the catch,’’ Manning said.
Lucky 7
Manning showed how even when the Saints’ defense got it right, Goff was up to the challenge. With time running out in regulation with the game on the line, Saints defensive end Cameron Jordan, with a defensive back blitzing on his outside shoulder, fired through a gap and had a direct line to Goff.
Jordan even had a hand on Goff’s jersey when Goff completed a pass to Higbee that moved the ball to the Saints’ 39-yard line. Zuerlein kicked the 57-yard winning field goal two plays later, after an incompletion.
“This is the best 7-yard completion of Jared Goff’s life here,’’ Manning said of what was officially called a 6-yard completion. “How he gets this ball off I’m not sure, they got him, Jordan’s got a piece of his jersey, the other guy is coming for his head, he almost hook-shots this throw to get it off. It’s an accurate throw … I’m telling you, the best 7-yard completion of his life.’’
January 29, 2019 at 8:28 am #97432wvParticipantGood stuff. “Amphibious.” I like it.
On the crowd noise — thats the main reason why I dont give a shit about the bad-non-call. The Rams had to play against that incredibly loud noise as well as the Saints football team. If the Saints cant win a game like ‘that’, I dont have any sympathy for them.
And fwiw, I dont think its ‘fair’ for one team to have to play against ‘that’ kind of noise. I’m serious. I’ve always thought that. I dont mind a little ‘home field advantage’ but to ‘me’ that kind of noise seriously alters the game itself. I mean how much of an advantage is one team allowed before it makes the game a mockery? I got zero sympathy for the Saints. There was a time there were no Domes in the football world. BOTH teams had to play in the snow or rain or whatever. But with domes came this ‘unfair’ advantage, imho. Another reason to hate modern civilization.
w
vJanuary 29, 2019 at 9:17 am #97433AgamemnonParticipantJanuary 29, 2019 at 9:23 am #97434InvaderRamModeratorI dont mind a little ‘home field advantage’ but to ‘me’ that kind of noise seriously alters the game itself. I mean how much of an advantage is one team allowed before it makes the game a mockery?
i don’t mind it.
no different than if the rams had to play in lambeau field. or soldier field.
actually that probably would have been worse.
January 29, 2019 at 9:40 am #97435wvParticipantI dont mind a little ‘home field advantage’ but to ‘me’ that kind of noise seriously alters the game itself. I mean how much of an advantage is one team allowed before it makes the game a mockery?
i don’t mind it.
no different than if the rams had to play in lambeau field. or soldier field.
actually that probably would have been worse.
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I disagree. See in Lambeau BOTH teams are fighting the SAME elements. Snow, wind, whatever. But in a dome only ONE team is fighting crowd noise. There’s a difference.
And I am not saying this coz it was the Rams in that game. I say this all the time no matter what team is having to fight dome-noise. I’d say it if the Vikings were playing in New Orleans. Etc.
Just strikes me as unfair.
But then I thought Germany having to take on Russia AND the West was unfair. I have a keen sense of unfairness.
w
vJanuary 29, 2019 at 9:46 am #97436Billy_TParticipantGood stuff. “Amphibious.” I like it.
On the crowd noise — thats the main reason why I dont give a shit about the bad-non-call. The Rams had to play against that incredibly loud noise as well as the Saints football team. If the Saints cant win a game like ‘that’, I dont have any sympathy for them.
And fwiw, I dont think its ‘fair’ for one team to have to play against ‘that’ kind of noise. I’m serious. I’ve always thought that. I dont mind a little ‘home field advantage’ but to ‘me’ that kind of noise seriously alters the game itself. I mean how much of an advantage is one team allowed before it makes the game a mockery? I got zero sympathy for the Saints. There was a time there were no Domes in the football world. BOTH teams had to play in the snow or rain or whatever. But with domes came this ‘unfair’ advantage, imho. Another reason to hate modern civilization.
w
vWV, thanks for that comment. I thought I was alone on an island about crowd noise. Couldn’t agree with you more.
My entire life, I thought it was . . . I don’t know the right words for it . . . perhaps rude or obnoxious? “Live,” I’ve always responded to what I see as good play with clapping, and then I’m silent; but it never made any sense to me to continue screaming non-stop. At what? Why are these people screaming? What just happened to cause this?
Um, nothing. They’re just being rude and obnoxious, and it spoils the experience for me in the stadium. I can only imagine how annoying it is for the players.
That said, I don’t expect a football stadium to be like a golfing crowd, or a church. Fans don’t have to hold their breaths, whisper, or anything like that. But I wish they’d just respond to great plays and then shut the heck up between them.
Oh, and whistles should be prohibited.
January 29, 2019 at 9:52 am #97437Billy_TParticipantI guess this boils down to this for me: Do you want to see a good game, aside from your team winning, hopefully? I do. I don’t want to sabotage one team so mine wins. I want both teams to be able to give their all, their best, in a context that optimizes that.
Non-stop screaming prevents that. It tilts the field and, depending on the venue, can really screw up one team or the other.
Seriously, I just don’t get the rationale. A fan pays good money to see a game. In my case, I traveled across the entire country to see the Rams twice in San Fran. I want to see great football, period, and that takes both teams to make it happen. Yeah, I’m rooting hard for one of them to be victorious, but if the other team is handicapped for this or that reason, it taints the victory for me.
That’s my two cents, anyway.
January 29, 2019 at 10:12 am #97439ZooeyModeratorI agree on the crowd noise. I’ve always thought that way, too. It really is like a 12th man advantage, and so I don’t like it, either.
I didn’t attribute that botched snap to crowd noise, but Manning is probably right.
There weren’t any false starts, though, were there? That’s very impressive.
January 29, 2019 at 11:01 am #97443joemadParticipantIt was a throw up the left sideline, which Goff put in the perfect spot for a 36-yard gain. The Rams scored on a 6-yard touchdown run by Todd Gurley on the following play, with just 23 seconds remaining in the first half as the Rams cut the Saints’ lead to 13-10.
It was beautiful…. what is going unsung on this play (end of 1st half drive) is the RAM defense…. they sacked Brees on back to back plays late in the 1st half to get the ball back….
In addition, Brees didn’t complete a pass in OT, I think the only yardage the Saints earned in OT was aided by a PI call in OT>
Goff was clutch, he delivered when the defense gave him the ball back in these crucial instances: right before halftime, at the end of regulation, and in OT…..
January 29, 2019 at 12:03 pm #97450znModeratorJanuary 29, 2019 at 6:38 pm #97458wvParticipantWV, thanks for that comment. I thought I was alone on an island about crowd noise. Couldn’t agree with you more.
My entire life, I thought it was . . . I don’t know the right words for it . . . perhaps rude or obnoxious? “Live,” I’ve always responded to what I see as good play with clapping, and then I’m silent; but it never made any sense to me to continue screaming non-stop. At what? Why are these people screaming? What just happened to cause this?
Um, nothing. They’re just being rude and obnoxious, and it spoils the experience for me in the stadium. I can only imagine how annoying it is for the players.
That said, I don’t expect a football stadium to be like a golfing crowd, or a church. Fans don’t have to hold their breaths, whisper, or anything like that. But I wish they’d just respond to great plays and then shut the heck up between them.
Oh, and whistles should be prohibited.
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Always makes me smile to see you on the Board, BT. Always.
As the world burns, and burns,
we still have…the Rams.…thats a funny image — football crowds behaving like golf crowds. Or, golf crowds behaving like football crowds.
w
vJanuary 29, 2019 at 6:45 pm #97459wvParticipantIt was beautiful…. what is going unsung on this play (end of 1st half drive) is the RAM defense…. they sacked Brees on back to back plays late in the 1st half to get the ball back…
Goff was clutch, he delivered when the defense gave him the ball back in these crucial instances: right before halftime, at the end of regulation, and in OT…..
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I think it was Goff’s best game, ever. I think he was fucking awesome. Dont care about the stats. To perform under those ridiculous conditions, and manage the game, and to overcome Gurley’s big screw up, and to make four or five elite, clutch throws under pressure, on the road, in a dome, for the NFC Championship — well…just fucking awesome.
And legatron. Good lord.
w
vJanuary 29, 2019 at 6:46 pm #97460InvaderRamModeratorI disagree. See in Lambeau BOTH teams are fighting the SAME elements. Snow, wind, whatever. But in a dome only ONE team is fighting crowd noise. There’s a difference.
yes. but if i had my choice. i’d rather the rams play in the superdome than lambeau. the rams are a warm weather team. so for the rams the disadvantage is much greater in green bay than it is in new orleans.
but if you’re preference is to have them both subjected to the same elements then sure. but the end effect is much different for the home team than it is for the road team. unless it’s another cold weather team like the bears.
January 29, 2019 at 7:02 pm #97462ZooeyModeratorI think it was Goff’s best game, ever. I think he was fucking awesome. Dont care about the stats. To perform under those ridiculous conditions, and manage the game, and to overcome Gurley’s big screw up, and to make four or five elite, clutch throws under pressure, on the road, in a dome, for the NFC Championship — well…just fucking awesome.
And legatron. Good lord.
w
vI think I might agree with that. I certainly believe his response to the crowd noise was amazing, especially with the championship on the line like that. He has had better numbers, of course. But the noise, the pressure…the falling behind by 13, and then by 10 half way through the 3rd…and he never got the yips. He had the presence to immediately dive on the muffed snap. When he got hit, he got right back up. He just kept playing.
He is 24.
This guy…give him another 6 years…he may very well be the best Rams QB of all time. And it may not be close. Warner might have been if not for the busted hand and the reckless coach. I never saw Waterfield, and really I was a child in the Gabriel era, and how many games did I see? Not sure. But I had no idea what I was watching, really. Who else is even in the conversation? Hadl lasted one year, I think. Good…but only a year or two of service. Everett was very good, but…he never got to the Holy Land, and there’s that phantom sack that he will never, ever live down. Warner. Bulger was very, very good, but…no results. Not his fault, but…no results. He was good.
Post-Bulger, the only QB worth a mention is Goff. IMO. And I highly doubt I’m in the minority on that.
And he’s 24, on his way to the Super Bowl, and still has a line graph with an upward angle.
I think I might be falling in love with Goff. Wow. Did not see that coming. Right now, he is still a very good accessory on that team. But if he wins the Super Bowl….
January 29, 2019 at 9:35 pm #97473InvaderRamModeratorI think it was Goff’s best game, ever. I think he was fucking awesome.
it was a milestone game. one we’ll remember years from now.
in my 24 years of following the rams i can say without a doubt he’s the second best rams qb i’ve seen. i know that’s not saying much but he’s also got a long way to go.
hopefully he stays a ram for a long time.
January 29, 2019 at 10:30 pm #97480wvParticipantI think it was Goff’s best game, ever. I think he was fucking awesome.
it was a milestone game. one we’ll remember years from now.
in my 24 years of following the rams i can say without a doubt he’s the second best rams qb i’ve seen. i know that’s not saying much but he’s also got a long way to go.
hopefully he stays a ram for a long time.
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24. One wonders if Kurt was that good, at that age?w
vJanuary 29, 2019 at 10:47 pm #97481ZooeyModeratorI think it was Goff’s best game, ever. I think he was fucking awesome.
it was a milestone game. one we’ll remember years from now.
in my 24 years of following the rams i can say without a doubt he’s the second best rams qb i’ve seen. i know that’s not saying much but he’s also got a long way to go.
hopefully he stays a ram for a long time.
Wait…
Goff was born when you started following the Rams…
That means…
InvaderRam is the Avatar! He’s John the Baptist! He is the fulfillment of the thingy!
January 29, 2019 at 10:47 pm #97482InvaderRamModerator24. One wonders if Kurt was that good, at that age?
yeah. we’ll never really know.
he came in at age 27. most qbs peak starting at around that age.
wonder what goff will look like in his age 27 season?
January 29, 2019 at 10:51 pm #97483InvaderRamModeratorWait…
Goff was born when you started following the Rams…
That means…
InvaderRam is the Avatar! He’s John the Baptist! He is the fulfillment of the thingy!
ha! well no actually it would have been 95. he was born 94. so no. false alarm! nothing to see…
January 29, 2019 at 11:13 pm #97487canadaramParticipantAnd fwiw, I dont think its ‘fair’ for one team to have to play against ‘that’ kind of noise. I’m serious. I’ve always thought that. I dont mind a little ‘home field advantage’ but to ‘me’ that kind of noise seriously alters the game itself. I mean how much of an advantage is one team allowed before it makes the game a mockery? I got zero sympathy for the Saints.
w
vI’ve never thought about it in that way before. You might be onto something. Last year when I went to the Vikings game down in Minneapolis I had to yell in order to talk to my friend sitting right beside me. My mouth was inches from his ear. I thought that it was jet engine loud. I had no idea how the Rams offense could do anything on the field. Actually, after their first drive they really didn’t do anything I guess. From everything that I’ve read it sounds like the NFC Championship game was louder. I don’t know how that could be possible. It’s a miracle that Goff and co. were able to mount a comeback under those circumstances.
January 29, 2019 at 11:59 pm #97488InvaderRamModeratorhere’s the entire episode.
again from the herd.
January 30, 2019 at 12:24 am #97490AgamemnonParticipantJanuary 30, 2019 at 1:36 pm #97504znModeratorCalifornia cool
Jared Goff’s football career has been a roller-coaster ride, but the 24-year-old Rams quarterback offsets all highs and lows with an unwavering chill.Michael Silver
http://www.nfl.com/labs/sidelines/jared-goff/jared-goff.html
LOS ANGELES — The mood was tense. The stakes were enormous. The din was deafening — and that was just in the Los Angeles Rams’ huddle.
Trailing 13-0 early in the second quarter of the NFC Championship Game in New Orleans two Sundays ago, his team rattled by a cacophonous Superdome crowd he’d later describe as “the loudest thing I’ll ever experience … disorienting … dizzying,” 24-year-old quarterback Jared Goff finally snapped. Yet it wasn’t the relentless roar of the 73,028 fans that triggered the young passer; rather, it was the well-intentioned intervention of some of the equally besieged men in his midst.
“He took control in a way that I’d never seen before,” veteran tackle Andrew Whitworth recalled last Thursday. “It was crazy loud, and a bunch of us kept trying to chime in and give input, and he just said, ‘Hey! Everybody shut up. I’ll get you guys into the right places. This is my show. I’ve got it.’ First time I’ve ever heard him do that … and you know what? Everybody listened.”
Said guard Rodger Saffold: “He said it with some bass in his voice. That was pretty cool. It was like, OK, Jared — I see you. The noise was insane, but the fact that he was able to settle us down, show his leadership and lead us to victory shows you how much he’s grown these last three years. He had so much poise — and that’s the biggest thing you need to know about Jared Goff: He has poise, win or lose.”
After spurring the Rams to a 26-23, overtime victory over the Saints, Goff charged onto the field and made some noise of his own. As he recalled last Wednesday during an interview at his home near Calabasas, California, that will air on NFL Network’s “GameDay Morning” on Super Sunday, “As soon as we got a few points on the board, it started to get a little more quiet. The more we’d score, the more quiet it’d get. You know, after a big play, it’d be dead silent. And when Greg (Zuerlein) hit that (game-winning, 57-yard) field goal, all you could hear was us screaming.”
Now, Goff and the Rams have a chance to make some legacy-defining noise in Atlanta, where on Sunday they’ll face living legend Tom Brady and the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LIII at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The matchup between a pair of quarterbacks raised in Northern California a generation apart is not one Goff will take lightly; he called the opportunity to compete against the 41-year-old Brady, who has been to eight previous Super Bowls and won five, “an honor.”
That said, he is highly unlikely to get overwhelmed by the enormity of the occasion. For if Goff, the first overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft, has a defining characteristic, it’s probably not his golden arm, wicked release or bold nature; rather, it’s his uncanny ability to remain calm and collected in adverse conditions or, similarly, to stay grounded when things are going great.
Or, more succinctly: His chill factor is off the charts.
“He is unfazed,” Rams coach Sean McVay said of his quarterback. “He has unreal poise and confidence that allows him to handle the success and adversity the same — which is a great characteristic for your quarterback to have.”
And Goff, who has absorbed an inordinate share of outside skepticism during his young career — having been stigmatized for, among other things, having small hands, going 0-7 during a rough rookie season and being a so-called system quarterback — believes that staying even-keeled gives him the best chance to be exceptional.
“I think that’s the way you should be as a quarterback,” he told me last Wednesday. “I think there is some time to show emotion and to have passion, and to show that intensity to people. At the same time, I think having a guy that can be the same all the time, good or bad, is super important.”
And, it turns out, Super: In becoming the first passer to guide the Rams to the Ultimate Game since Hall of Famer Kurt Warner 17 years ago — with a chance to emulate Warner’s Lombardi-seizing performance in Atlanta two years before that — Goff has made a mockery of those critics who wrote him off as a bust as recently as the summer of 2017.
* * * * *
As with many rookie quarterbacks, Goff’s indoctrination into the NFL was a choppy one. Unlike many No. 1 overall picks, however, this signal-caller’s path to the top of the draft was also a choppy one.
Goff, who grew up north of San Francisco in the sleepy town of Novato, didn’t earn the starting job at Marin Catholic High School until three games into his junior year. Despite a highly prolific prep career, the 6-foot-4 passer wasn’t a blue-chip recruit when he enrolled at nearby Cal in the fall of 2013. He proceeded to win the starting job as a true freshman — only to suffer through a 1-11 season bracketed by indignity and injury. As a sophomore for the defense-deficient Golden Bears, Goff was occasionally sent to the sidelines in favor of his more mobile backup, and Cal failed to qualify for a bowl game once more. Then, after guiding the Bears to an 8-5 mark and an Armed Forces Bowl victory as a junior, Goff declared for the draft, and a steady procession of snide comments began.
Some of the negative perceptions quickly evaporated. Goff, who as a freshman had been pulled from a game at Oregon because he’d struggled amid rainy conditions, refuted that stigma when he shined during a wet pre-draft workout for the Rams in Berkeley. At the NFL Scouting Combine, Goff’s hand measurement caused a stir — at nine inches, he was supposedly deficient in that department. To this day, Goff and his closest friends laugh at the “small hands” imbroglio. As he said last week: “They’re big enough to get to the Super Bowl, I guess.”
When the Rams traded up to land the first overall pick a couple of weeks before the draft, they were targeting Goff, who would begin his career as Case Keenum’s backup. He got his first start on Nov. 20, when the Rams were 4-5; three weeks later, after a blowout home defeat to the Atlanta Falcons, head coach Jeff Fisher was fired. Playing behind an underperforming offensive line, Goff would end up losing all seven of his starts as a rookie, and the ‘B’ word — bust — began popping up in TV segments, newspaper columns and various social media platforms.
“It didn’t really mean anything to me,” Goff said. “I played seven games, and three of them without a head coach. I had a good perspective on it. I understood that seven games shouldn’t define me and won’t define me. I know what I can do and I know who I am. I never lost any confidence. And I hope all the rookie quarterbacks out there this year can look at my story and see how quickly it can turn around, and just continue to keep their head up.”
The Rams’ hiring of McVay, who at 30 was the youngest head coach in modern NFL history, was inspired by his reputation as a budding quarterback guru. It would end up being a game-changer, for both the franchise and the young franchise quarterback, but Goff’s transformation wasn’t as sudden or immediate as is commonly perceived.
“Honestly, we didn’t really know how it was gonna go, ’cause there were so many things he needed to improve upon — from having consistency with his football, to his movement in the pocket, to reading defenses with his feet, to having the confidence to stand in there and deliver the throw,” recalled newly hired Green Bay Packers head coach Matt LaFleur, who was McVay’s offensive coordinator in 2017. “He got beat up pretty good the year before, and it wasn’t like we got there and it was magical. Early on, in OTAs, our defense made a ridiculous amount of sacks. But to his credit, he worked extremely hard, and it was the coolest experience I’ve ever had in coaching — to see his confidence grow by the day, to see a young player mature before our eyes. It was like watching a boy become a man.”
At first, Greg Olson — now the Raiders’ offensive coordinator, he was the Rams’ quarterbacks coach at the time — didn’t embrace Goff’s chill.
“Initially, I thought it was indifference,” Olson admitted. “But I soon realized it was a calm demeanor under pressure. I’ve never, ever sensed panic in him. It’s just his personality. He never gets rattled. He has nerves of steel.”
Said LaFleur: “That’s the one thing I can say about him as a person: He’s got a resilient mindset. A lot of people would have crumbled and failed. He’s unfazed. The thing that’s so cool about him is, if he makes a mistake, he’s able to bounce back. Some guys pile on; he’s able to hit the reset button.”
After a strong second season that featured the Rams winning their first NFC West title since 2003, Goff got much, much better in 2018, spurring the Rams to an 8-0 start. Yet even as he entered the upper echelon of quarterbacking, Goff’s achievements were often marginalized by outsiders who credited the team’s offensive success to McVay’s innovative game plans.
Goff, some critics charged, was merely executing the coach’s orders, sometimes receiving input through his helmet before receiving the snap (as allowed by NFL rules before the play clock reaches 15 seconds). Others claimed he was simply a product of — wait for it — The System.
The tag became a running joke among Goff’s cadre of close friends since childhood — one of whom, Patrick Conroy, showed up at the Rams’ playoff opener wearing a T-shirt he’d just ordered off the internet, complete with Rams colors and the words “Los Angeles System QB” scrawled across the front.
“When people started coming out with that, we kind of laughed — people wanted to put that claim on him,” Conroy said. “So when I saw that online (on a website with merchandise that poked fun at various L.A.-based athletes), I had to grab it. He saw it and said, ‘That’s pretty good.’ And yes, I’ll be wearing it to the Super Bowl.”
Said another of Goff’s close friends, Cam Croteau: “We’ve had some fun with that. We’ll be at a game, and every time Jared drops a dime, we’ll go, ‘Oh, wow — that was a great throw, Sean.’ McVay has been hyped up as The Guru, and understandably. For a lot of people, things like (the Rams’ rapid improvement) are binary: There’s one reason why this happened. It’s a little bit of a chip on the shoulder for [Goff], but it’s not what defines him.”
For what it’s worth, the person most bothered by the System QB label is McVay himself. Said the coach: “He makes ‘The System’ what it is — because he’s great.”
Goff’s response: “I appreciate him defending me. And, you know, it means a lot. But [the label] doesn’t bother me. I mean, honestly: We win games, and you can call me whatever you want.”
* * * * *
Midway through the season, with the Rams sitting atop the NFL with a perfect record, many people were calling Goff a legitimate MVP candidate. In mid-December, after a three-game stretch (including defeats to the Chicago Bears and Philadelphia Eagles) during which the quarterback threw seven interceptions and only one touchdown pass, Goff was suddenly being portrayed as a liability who’d leveled off after a promising start.
In both cases, Goff stayed level-headed and even-keeled. His parents, Jerry and Nancy, say he has always been that way, sometimes to the point of semi-absurdity. This past November, when a pair of wildfires raged near the Rams’ training facility, Goff’s parents were visiting from Northern California. As the flames drew closer to his home in the hills, Goff unplugged and checked out.
“That (Thursday) night when the fire got close to the house, he just went to sleep,” Nancy recalled. “He was trusting the people close to him to look out for him, which is true to his nature. Once we saw how close it was, we woke him up, and it was, ‘Alright, let’s go.’ He got in the car like it was nothing (and evacuated). He worries about the things he needs to worry about, but not what other people need to worry about.”
Two months later, Goff stood on the Superdome field feeling besieged. The coach-to-player communication system in his helmet malfunctioned before the Rams’ first drive, forcing him to wear backup Sean Mannion’s helmet instead. At times, Goff put his hands over his earholes in an effort to hear McVay’s play calls, and when that footage was broadcast on the stadium scoreboards, things got even louder.
At the end of the first quarter, the Rams trailed 13-0 and would need a fake punt from their own 30 to extend their first scoring drive — with Goff’s shut up and let me handle this huddle speech sparking a new level of focus.
“I essentially realized how much of a premium communication in there needed to be,” Goff recalled. “Even more so than we initially thought, because of the noise. I don’t remember what I said.
“It was definitely a stressful first few drives there. You never want to start off that way. I could barely hear anything. I’m wearing someone else’s helmet. They got up 13-0. It was not a good situation for us, but it was an awesome one to scrape our way back and come out on top.”
In other words, even though he stays calm on the outside, Goff is not completely impervious to pressure.
“I think part of it is just the way I am,” he said. “Stuff just kind of rolls off my back pretty easily, regardless of the situation, if it’s pressure-packed or not. And I think a lot of it is, I am feeling that pressure. I’m just trying not to show and trying to be the steady, calm personality that I think a quarterback needs to be.”‘
* * * * *
On Super Sunday, Goff will go up against the most accomplished quarterback ever to play the game — a man who won his first Lombardi Trophy 17 years earlier against the then-St. Louis Rams, when Goff was in second grade.
Brady was 24 at the time, and that victory launched him on a path that made him one of the sports world’s biggest celebrities. Goff, the same age now as Brady was then, knows that a victory over the Patriots could be life-changing.
“I hope so,” he said. “I hope we win and I hope it’s great. (But) I don’t think I’ll change too much; I don’t think my immediate circle will change too much.”
And if Goff starts to show signs of affectedness — well, the noise he hears from his friends and family members will be Superdome-level loud.
“He’s always been the same, and stuff never gets to his head,” said Robbie Terheyden, another of Goff’s close friends since childhood. “If it starts to, we’ll bring him back.”
Goff’s father, Jerry, has little doubt about that: “His friends would tune him up so fast. If he wins, there are gonna be a lot of things thrown his way — at least, I assume there will be — but in terms of his personality, he would never change, because we would call him on it. We know he has humility, and we know what he stands for. It’s not something I’d ever stress out about.”
Chances are, neither will his son. And if he does, you can bet he won’t show it.
January 30, 2019 at 3:44 pm #97509ZooeyModeratorMichael Silver is one of the better sports writers.
January 30, 2019 at 4:05 pm #97510wvParticipant“At first, Greg Olson — now the Raiders’ offensive coordinator, he was the Rams’ quarterbacks coach at the time — didn’t embrace Goff’s chill. ”
Interesting.
w
vFebruary 1, 2019 at 1:25 am #97573znModeratorJared Goff made some clutch throws in the NFC Championship game, and Peyton Manning is here to break them down.
Watch Manning analyze Goff’s big plays in “Detail,” exclusively on ESPN+. pic.twitter.com/Vx2jQ3WZ4G
— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) January 28, 2019
February 1, 2019 at 1:25 am #97574znModeratorJared Goff made some clutch throws in the NFC Championship game, and Peyton Manning is here to break them down.
Watch Manning analyze Goff’s big plays in “Detail,” exclusively on ESPN+. pic.twitter.com/Vx2jQ3WZ4G
— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) January 28, 2019
February 2, 2019 at 11:49 am #97614znModeratorThe ‘quirky and nerdy’ leadership of Jared Goff and how it inspires the Rams
Vincent Bonsignore
ATLANTA — Jared Goff was moments away from taking the field against the New Orleans Saints in the NFC Championship Game when crisis arrived. Given the way the Saints and the Superdome devours opponents with a lethal combination of noise, energy and talent, the Rams had been on emergency watch all week. But this was pushing it. Not even one play into the game and it was already DEFCON 1 level anxiousness.
Only you wouldn’t have known by looking at Goff.
His in-helmet communication system has malfunctioned, with the audio from head coach and play caller Sean McVay cutting out. Rather than turn his own emergency into a full-blown panic, Goff calmly, almost discreetly, traded helmets with backup quarterback Sean Mannion and carried on.
Imagine heading to the altar to get married and having to switch suits at the last second with your best man. The fit isn’t perfect. It’s a little too tight in the waist and not quite as long as needed in the leg. Everything just feels … off. Not exactly the way to start off your wedding day, right?
Yet as much as Goff could, he kept it all to himself and soldiered on.
“I didn’t even know about that until after the game,” Robert Woods revealed this week.
Woods still marvels at how Goff managed the situation on the go and overcame future Hall of Famer Drew Brees to help push the Rams into Super Bowl LIII.
“To play in a championship game (and) your microphone’s not working. You’ve got to switch helmets. It’s not yours. It doesn’t fit correctly,” Woods said. “To go through all that and remain poised and lead us to a victory, that’s a total leader. That’s a leader. That’s a warrior.”
“He just kind of handled it exactly like a veteran — even-keeled, calm demeanor — kind of like what we talk about all the time,” McVay said. “We’re very confident in his ability to lead us, knowing that it’s a big game like we’ve said, but I think Jared will be himself, which is exactly what we want him to be.”
For those who know him best, it was peak Goff.
“Unflappable” is how right guard Austin Blythe describes the Rams’ third-year quarterback.
“Calm. Cool. Collected,” right tackle Rob Havenstein said. “And always the same guy, no matter what.”
And maybe that is the biggest takeaway from the Rams’ magical march to Super Bowl LIII and the remarkable transformation of Goff from potential bust to a quarterback who has led his team to the pinnacle of pro football.
The more details are revealed — both in how he plays and the way his teammates describe him — the more we understand and know him.
“And it’s one of the things you really appreciate about him,” Sullivan said. “There’s nothing that you can question from the start. He’s just a genuine, authentic guy. The first time you meet him, Jared is unapologetically Jared.”
Goff’s persona, as teammates have come to know, is a little bit of California cool and an unassuming nature that can sometimes be construed as goofy. But it’s so genuine and unpretentious that it is looked upon as a strength and not a weakness.
Said Woods: “You want someone who is a little quirky and nerdy, of course. Like Jared. Very smart.”
In many ways, Goff is your typical 24-year-old kid. He also just happens to have a razor-sharp football mind that can decipher defenses and coverages and a cannon arm that allows him to make every throw.
And in his own way — through performance and just being himself rather than trying to be someone he’s not — Goff has become a leader who his teammates willingly follow.
He is not a dynamic personality who plays with a fire in his stomach and inspires his teams with bravado and personality. But he is someone who conducts himself with about as much stress as someone lifting themselves out of a deckside chase lounge to go take a dip in the pool.
“That was kind of evident in the Saints game,” Blythe said. “Just the way he can remain calm and gave us the encouragement we needed.”
So unfazed by everything that’s happened to him leading up to this point, Goff has been able to process and compartmentalize it all into a steady stewardship that his teammates follow.
“It’s just Jared being Jared,” Sullivan said.
Jared Goff’s cool demeanor keeps the Rams calm. (Kirby Lee / USA TODAY Sports)
Goff has endured his share of difficult challenges. First, there was the disastrous one-win freshman season at Cal when he was constantly under siege and victimized by an inexperienced and ineffective offensive line. The eventual turnaround in Berkeley saw him rise from the chaos to lead the Golden Bears to a bowl game his final season and distinguish himself as the No. 1 overall selection in the 2016 NFL draft.Then, there was the catastrophic rookie year in Los Angeles that resulted in the firing of head coach Jeff Fisher and the raising of legitimate doubts about Goff’s ability to be a franchise quarterback befitting the draft’s top pick. He helped orchestrate a swift and decisive personal and team turnaround that earned him Pro Bowl honors and placed the Rams on the doorstep of a Super Bowl championship.
Through it all, Goff has remained the same chill kid from Marin County. The effect his presence has on the Rams is one his teammates appreciate as much as they respect.
“Do I think Jared’s demeanor helps this offense? Absolutely,” Sullivan said. “I think him being so calm and cool is a really calming influence on everybody. Because we’ve got a lot of Type A guys that are high strung. Jared kind of levels everyone out. So I think he’s done an amazing job and his personality is a huge part of his success.”
“He’s just a special kid,” left tackle Andrew Whitworth said. “I’ve said it since the first day I came to training camp and really since the first day I met him. I realized that he’s a special kid. I told my wife before these playoffs started that it’s the first year it really wasn’t about me. I was more nervous for these playoffs because I believe in Jared Goff and I believe he deserves to win, and I want to be right about that. That’s what means most to me.”
What we’ve learned, ultimately, is that Goff isn’t shaped or defined by what happens to him as much as how he copes and processes situations by applying his own personality.
It’s why his struggles at Cal and in his rookie season with the Rams didn’t crush him. And why the incredible high of quarterbackinng the Rams to the Super Bowl won’t change him. Goff has floated around Atlanta this week as if he just dropped into town for a two-day minicamp.
Almost by osmosis, that personality has rubbed off on his teammates.
“Vinny, this isn’t much different than open locker room in Thousand Oaks, right?” Sullivan asked me during one of the Rams’ media availabilities this week.
There were at least three hundred reporters swarming around. It was chaotic and claustrophobic. Sullivan looked on with a smile. Just around the corner, Goff held court with his typical easy smile.
“Just a few more people,” Sullivan continued, laughing. “We’ve traveled all over the place. We’ve played out of the country. We stayed in Jacksonville for a week. We got displaced by wildfires. We went to the Broadmore in Colorado. We were supposed to play in Mexico City, had to adapt and go back to play in L.A. I mean, look I understand there’s a lot of hoopla around this, but at the end of the day, it’s a football game.
“We’ve traveled a ton and done a bunch of crazy stuff in two years as a team. I promise this is having no effect on us.”
That’s the influence Goff — in his own unique, laid-back way — can have on a team.
“I get that question a lot,” Goff said of why he has that effect on teammates. “I don’t have a good answer for you. Because I don’t know.”
February 2, 2019 at 12:16 pm #97623wvParticipantWell they need to keep Mannion, I guess.
His head is the same size as Goff’s.
w
vFebruary 2, 2019 at 1:16 pm #97624InvaderRamModeratorWell they need to keep Mannion, I guess.
His head is the same size as Goff’s.
w
van honest question. they can’t just bring a second helmet that’s fitted to goff’s head????
i do like goff’s demeanor though. seems to inspire his teammates too. although playing well also inspires them i’m sure. but the fact he doesn’t change from play to play. that’s definitely part of it.
still can’t believe they came back from double digits points on the road against a hof qb. just crazy.
- This reply was modified 5 years, 10 months ago by InvaderRam.
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