media & others on the TAMPA game

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  • #124723
    Avatar photozn
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    Rich Hammond@Rich_Hammond
    That’s a really good win the for the Rams.

    Really, really baffling. But a good win.

    Brandon Staley will get job interviews sooner than later.

    SeattleRams@seattlerams_nfl
    7-3 and….

    FIRST PLACE IN THE NFC WEST!!

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Rams haven’t been able to close out games on offense. McVay’s wanted to see that execution and killer instinct.

    Don’t overlook the 3 touchbacks as a major first half positive from Matt Gay and the new-look Rams kicking game.

    SeattleRams@seattlerams_nfl
    This offense can be a beautiful thing, and then a total fucking nightmare!

    Delay of game, fumbles, INT’s, TFL’s…

    But Sean McVay is now 32-0 when leading at the half.

    And you know who we haven’t talked about tonight? (which is a good thing) Joe Noteboom.

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    snap fumble and then a delay of game, and then Goff throws a pick. really no words for that.

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    Rams safety Jordan Fuller: “I would say the win was more important to me than that (game-winning) interception.”

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Jordan Fuller says the first interception was basically Tom Brady throwing it straight to him. “Don’t drop it. Don’t drop it. Don’t drop it,” he says he thought. Fuller added he read Brady’s eyes the whole way on the second one.

    Next Gen Stats@NextGenStats
    In which situations did Jared Goff and the @Rams offense find success against the Buccaneers defense?

    vs. Blitz
    ➤ 16/18, 203 yards, 2 TD (+16.1% CPOE)

    Targeting the Slot
    ➤ 16/18, 137 yards, TD (+14.5% CPOE)

    Under Pressure
    ➤ 6/7, 121 yards (+15.0% CPOE)

    shannon sharpe@ShannonSharpe
    I guess Brady doesn’t know Goff well enough to shake his hand after losing. Yet, he knows every qb after he wins. Brady is full of what the elephant left on the show ground. His attitude is bulljive and it’s time to call his A** out on it. Face with look of triumphFace with look of triumphFace with look of triumph

    #124729
    Avatar photozn
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    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    Jared Goff said post-game that he was “making some pretty dumb mistakes, honestly” in the second half

    Lindsey Thiry@LindseyThiry
    Jordan Fuller, during his news conference with reporters, says the “locker room is electric” and he wants to get back to it.

    Matt Bowen@MattBowen41
    Rams didn’t get much movement off the ball tonight on the zone run schemes. And they struggled to match the speed of the Bucs LBs at the 2nd level.

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Don’t know about the TV broadcast, but I don’t think I said Joe Noteboom’s name once on the radio side. That’s a major win for the fill-in LT. Nice design and execution by the
    @RamsNFL offense.

    BTHRams@BTH_Rams
    Whew. What a game. Such good teams. Chances we get a rematch after Week 17 are high.

    #124730
    Avatar photozn
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    #124732
    Avatar photozn
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    ESPN Stats & Info@ESPNStatsInfo
    Jared Goff completed 39 passes en route to a 27-24 Rams win over the Bucs.

    That puts him alongside Tom Brady (2009 vs Bills) for the 2nd-most completions in a Monday Night Football Game.

    Ken Anderson holds the MNF single-game completion record of 40, set in 1982.

    Sosa K@QBsMVP
    This game was especially big for the Rams because it could help decide NFC playoff seeding down the line. The Rams now hold tiebreakers over the Seahawks, Bears, and Buccaneers.

    Matt Bowen@MattBowen41
    Jared Goff made the throws tonight. And McVay schemed-up zone coverage. Had answers for pressure, too.

    Davante Adams@tae15adams
    Cooper Kupp is the most underrated receiver in the league.

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Sean McVay ends his presser by saying Matt Gay looks like he trains with Aaron Donald.

    “Kicker’s jacked, man.”

    Matt is slightly off-camera because he’s next on Zoom. On his way out, we hear McVay go, “F—-kin’ JACKED kicker, man!”

    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    Kupp/Woods: 28 targets, 23 catches, 275 yards

    Brown/Godwin/Evans: 32 targets, 20 catches, 159 yards

    Rich Hammond@Rich_Hammond
    Goff had a ton of pressure on him tonight. Managed the offense really well. You still hate to see the INTs but the whole offense was on his shoulders tonight and he got it done.

    PFF@PFF
    Tom Brady on throws 15+ yards downfield:

    Black small square 1-9
    Black small square 18 yards
    Black small square 2 INT

    RIPKobeBeanBryant@Rams24_7
    -Rams are allowing 4.6 ppg in the second half of games.
    -Highest total in a second half: 14.
    -7 points and fewer in 8 games
    This isn’t an anomaly after 10 games. We will be in every game. This bodes well come January

    Rams Brothers@RamsBrothers
    Safe to say Goff has outplayed Russell Wilson and Tom Brady in back-to-back weeks.

    Jared Goff over the last two weeks: 678 yards, 3 TD, 2 INT, 1 fumble lost, 2 wins

    Russell Wilson & Tom Brady combined over the last two weeks vs. the #Rams: 464 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT, 1 fumble lost

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Sean McVay is 32-0 when leading at halftime. “You guys gotta stop saying that. You’re going to jinx us. Please stop saying that.”

    Matt Bowen@MattBowen41
    Tom Brady’s sub-par games this season…

    Front four pressure (with twists/stunts) + split-safety coverage in the secondary.

    CHI, NYG, NO, LAR

    #124735
    Avatar photozn
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    Rams CV@RamsCV79
    Props to our draft picks: Jefferson, Akers, Fuller, huge night on prime time and couldn’t be more proud of our scouting department. Future looks bright, now onto the 49ers, let’s put final nail in their coffin
    @RamsNFL #ramshouse Happy for WIN on the road vs solid 7-3 Bucs team

    Rodger Saffold@Rodger_Saffold
    Huge win for the @RamsNFL ‼️

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    Rams QB Jared Goff on Joe Noteboom making his first NFL start at left tackle: “Joe did great. Joe did really well.”

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    That fourth quarter looks a lot different if Morgan Fox strip sack wasn’t blown dead prematurely.

    But I think it says a lot that Rams didn’t let that — or any other mistakes — derail what they were out to do tonight.

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    Sean McVay on the Rams’ 2020 rookie class: “They’re just great football players that have found a way to really exceed the expectations given their draft slot.”

    Rams QB Jared Goff: “We can be as good as we want to be, honestly. We’ve got it all in front of us. Everything is there for us to take.”

    #124742
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    from https://theathletic.com/news/rams-bucs-tom-brady-jared-goff-mnf/cfWDPTqldmPI

    How the Rams gave Brady trouble

    Jourdan Rodrigue, Rams beat writer: The Rams’ interior pressure disrupted Brady’s pocket at times in Monday night’s win, but as he went to the quick-passing game, it was the halftime adjustments made by the defense that helped seal the win. A couple of clutch pass-breakups by cornerback Darious Williams, no more pass-interference penalties that were such a factor on third downs in the first half and a second interception by Fuller to seal the game were huge difference-makers. The DPI calls, in fact, ended up being Brady’s longest “pass plays” of the game, as he couldn’t get anything else over 18 yards.

    Where L.A. ranks among the NFC’s best
    Rodrigue: As the Rams proved in consecutive weeks, they’re right in the mix among other NFC contenders down the latter stretch of the season. Last week, they came away with a decisive win against Seattle and held the top scoring offense in the NFL to 16 points. This week, it was Brady and his stacked group of receivers, plus a top defense that the Rams edged. Where this team finds its edge is in the often-unheralded players doing the dirty work — like Fuller, a sixth-round rookie, and the receiver tandem of Robert Woods and Cooper Kupp, who combined for 23 catches and 275 yards. That’s not a typo.

    Are the Bucs still top-tier NFC contenders?

    Greg Auman, Buccaneers beat reporter: This loss wasn’t as close as the score indicated, and the Bucs missed another chance to prove themselves against a top NFC challenger.

    As good as they looked against the Packers and Raiders, they haven’t been the same in the last month, and they’ll need to be better on both sides of the ball if they have expectations of winning a playoff game. Brady had two bad interceptions, the last one spoiling a reasonable shot at a tying field goal if not a win. And now the Chiefs come to town in six days.

    #124744
    Avatar photozn
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    #124745
    Avatar photozn
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    #124746
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    “Thank the lord we’re not coming back out here,” says safety John Johnson, about the Rams wrapping up their brutal stretch of east-coast travel.

    Lots of praise from Jared Goff and Robert Woods tonight on Joe Noteboom’s first start at LT – especially considering the circumstances.

    Rams CV@RamsCV79
    Rams are second youngest team in the NFL, picking up quality free agents, excellent coaching staff, glad they are in 1sr place this late in the season

    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    In his first 102 NFL games, Aaron Donald was held without a tackle just once.

    In each of his last two games, Donald has had zero tackles.

    Btw in no way is this a critique of Donald. He gets held all the time and is doubled/tripled often. Still probably the best non-QB in the NFL.

    Just crazy that he hasn’t had a tackle since Week 8.

    CBS Sports HQ@CBSSportsHQ
    Rams Defense Since Week 4: NFL RANK
    16.2 PPG 1st
    258.3 YPG 1st
    4.3 Yds/play 1st
    172.8 Pass YPG 1st
    5.9 Yds/att 1st

    Rich Hammond@Rich_Hammond
    there’s probably an NFL rule that needs fixing. That Brady double-pass penalty did not include a loss of down. So the Rams had to choose between 4th-and-2 or 3rd-and-15. As I see it, should be like an intentional grounding. What an odd sequence.

    the Rams declined the penalty. Accepting the penalty would have given the Bucs 3rd-and-15 and another shot at it. Defending team shouldn’t have to make that choice.

    #124749
    Avatar photozn
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    jrry32

    It’s clear that Staley and McVay are very similar in their approaches. They drill execution and assignment soundness. Loved Wade, but his defense definitely was not disciplined like this one is.

    ==

    Greg Beacham@gregbeacham
    Just rewatched the declined pass interference on Ramsey vs Mike Evans in the 2nd quarter. It’s an astonishingly bad call. Evans slaps Ramsey in the helmet with each hand, and then he pushes off. Incredible.

    Sam Farmer@LATimesfarmer
    Andrew Whitworth was pretty amped before tonight’s Rams game. So you officiated a game of backyard basketball for his sons right up to kickoff, then was glued to the tube.

    ==

    aeneas1

    the bucs made it clear early that they were going to stack the line and make goff beat them… in fact at that point it seemed that mcvay’s run plan was nothing more than a “well let’s give this a try, maybe we’ll get lucky” approach… in other words, seems hard to blame anyone on the oline for the lack of running success, i mean the bucs just ate up the outside zone, ate up the tight ends and wr trying to seal edges, the bucs didn’t flow with the line, the just stacked it and shot gaps, blew up the zone, the rams had no answers.

    #124750
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    NFL Week 11 PFF ReFocused: Los Angeles Rams 27, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 24

    https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-2020-week-11-pff-refocused-los-angeles-rams-27-tampa-bay-buccaneers-24

    While Los Angeles Rams quarterback Jared Goff seemingly tried to give away the game with a late interception to Jordan Whitehead, it was ultimately Tom Brady who secured the win for Goff and company with a game-ending blunder.

    Brady overthrew a well-covered Cameron Brate deep over the middle of the field and into the hands of Rams rookie Jordan Fuller while trailing 27-24 with less than two minutes to play, dropping the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to 7-4 on the season.

    STORY OF THE GAME

    Brady was simply not his future Hall-of-Fame self on Monday night. The 43-year-old veteran completed just 26-of-48 passes for 216 yards (4.5 yards per attempt), two touchdowns and two interceptions in the contest. He will likely finish PFF’s grading reviews in the bottom 10 at his position in Week 11. He also completed just one pass and threw both his interceptions on 18 attempts of at least 15 yards downfield on first review.

    Goff wasn’t much better for Los Angeles, but his playmakers made up for his relatively forgettable outing. The Rams signal-caller averaged fewer than 6 air yards per target for the game, giving after-the-catch monsters like Robert Woods and Cooper Kupp opportunities to rack up yardage with the ball in their hands. Woods and Kupp combined for 275 receiving yards and one touchdown (Woods) on the night.

    ROOKIE WATCH

    Rams rookies Van Jefferson and Cam Akers each scored their first NFL career touchdowns against the Buccaneers on Monday night but did little else outside of their respective end-zone trips. Defensively, Fuller was the man of the hour with his two interceptions, but it’s only fair to add the context that the two Brady picks were thrown directly into his chest.

    Buccaneers rookie safety Antoine Winfield Jr. recorded an impressive special teams tackle for the highlight reels but turned in a forgettable performance on defense. He missed two tackles on the night and didn’t make enough of the splash plays we’ve become accustomed to from the former Minnesota standout this season. Fellow Bucs rookie Tristan Wirfs continued his strong season in pass protection with what should be just one pressure allowed against Los Angeles once PFF’s review process is complete.

    #124757
    Avatar photonittany ram
    Moderator

    “Goff wasn’t much better for Los Angeles, but his playmakers made up for his relatively forgettable outing.”

    What game was he watching? Goff also completed 39 passes and threw for nearly 400 yds and 3 TDs.

    #124779
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams’ Jordan Fuller, rookies help write storybook night in Tampa Bay: The Pile

    Jourdan Rodrigue

    https://theathletic.com/2217840/2020/11/24/rams-jordan-fuller-tom-brady/?source=emp_shared_article

    Jordan Fuller wrote the storyline this week, and he couldn’t have done it any better.

    Fuller, the Rams’ rookie safety — a sixth-round draft pick, No. 199, same as Tampa Bay quarterback Tom Brady 20 years ago — intercepted Brady twice on Monday night to help seal the Rams’ 27-24 win.

    Fuller mentioned offhand this week that Brady has been playing in the NFL for (almost) as long as he’s been alive. And sure, Brady’s deep ball is wobbly these days. But still, that’s a big deal for a young player, and especially one who has been on such a journey as Fuller.

    “First of all, I’m definitely keeping those (game balls),” Fuller said with a laugh after the game, as the Rams’ locker room nearby erupted in celebration. “It just means a lot, being able to compete against one of the best quarterbacks of all time. It’s something I don’t take lightly, something this whole defense doesn’t take lightly at all.”

    Fuller quietly took over the Rams’ starting safety role opposite strong safety John Johnson this spring, impressing coaches with his ball skills and his ability to get to his spot on every play. He struggled with a shoulder/neck stinger before the team’s bye two weeks ago and had a stint on short-term injured reserve. After he came back, two of his counterparts, rookie safety Terrell Burgess and second-year safety Taylor Rapp, suffered injuries and currently are on IR (Burgess’ injury is season-ending).

    Against Brady’s extremely stacked group of receivers, which includes Mike Evans, Chris Godwin and Antonio Brown (and that’s not even including tight end Rob Gronkowski), the Rams’ secondary depth looked slim. Yet with Fuller’s two interceptions, plus a pass breakup by John Johnson and two by cornerback Darious Williams, the Rams held Brady without a completion of longer than 18 yards, and just 216 total passing yards.

    Fuller said Brady’s first interception, in the third quarter, appeared to be thrown right to him, deep in center field.

    “Don’t drop it,” he said he repeated to himself until he secured the ball. On the second interception, which iced the win in the fourth quarter after a go-ahead field goal, Fuller said he read Brady’s eyes the entire way.

    “Tonight he was outstanding,” head coach Sean McVay said. “That’s an offense that can beat you in a variety of different ways. He shows up in crunch time, made the play that we expect him to be able to make, and he was awesome.”

    Fuller wasn’t the only Rams rookie who stepped up big. Running back Cam Akers and receiver Van Jefferson each scored their first NFL touchdown.

    Akers worked into space out of the backfield, caught a pass and ran hard for a 4-yard score in the third quarter to give the Rams a 24-17 lead.

    “I liked the tough contribution from Cam Akers. You could feel the burst,” McVay said. “I mean, wow, that’s a tough run defense that we played tonight. … And then Van Jefferson came through with a big touchdown catch as well.”

    Fans finally got a look at the goal-line, one-on-one precision moves that Jefferson perfected in training camp (against Jalen Ramsey) on his second-quarter, 7-yard touchdown catch.

    “They’re the future,” Johnson said of the rookies. “They came in ready to work. … True professionals. I tip my hat to them, and I’m very excited for them. They’re definitely the future — it’s a no-brainer.”

    All of these rookies, by the way, were drafted in the second round or later (some much, much later). But each is contributing in important ways and especially in this crucial November stretch.

    “They’re just great football players that have found a way to exceed the expectations, given their draft slot,” McVay said. “I’ve just been very pleased with those guys. I love this team, and the way that these guys continue to improve.”

    Vintage Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods

    Rams receivers Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods were exactly who we know them to be.

    The two combined for 23 catches and 275 yards against a Tampa Bay secondary that previously had allowed an average of just 223.7 yards per game.

    The Rams knew they’d have a hard time against the NFL’s No. 1 rushing defense, even though their run game had been working well in previous games. So it was on Woods and Kupp (and quarterback Jared Goff, but we’ll get to him) to keep the offense moving in a game that featured 51 passing plays in 71 total offensive snaps.

    Kupp got things going early, and hit 100 receiving yards by halftime, and Woods quickly followed. The most demonstrative sign that the two would click into their signature groove came on the first drive, when Kupp caught five passes for 62 yards and had plenty of yards after the catch, and Woods scored the drive-capping 4-yard touchdown. The Bucs previously had allowed just 5.8 yards per pass attempt; with Kupp and Woods’ efforts, they allowed 7.4 against the Rams.

    Woods finished with 12 catches on 15 targets for 130 yards and a touchdown, while Kupp had 11 catches on 13 targets for 145 yards.

    Also “vintage” Kupp/Woods? Kupp had 79 of his yards after the catch, while Woods had 72 YAC yards. They also did it from everywhere, combining to run 13 different route types, according to Next Gen Stats, with nine of those picking up 10 or more yards.

    “Really, you go into games hoping for games like this every single night,” Woods said. “Making plays, the ball’s finding you, Jared’s zippin’ it. You’re in that rhythm, you can’t be touched no matter what coverage, who is lined up in front of you…

    “When you’re really in rhythm, it doesn’t matter who is in front of you. You’re just going out there and it turns into route-versus-air when you’re in a rhythm like that.”

    Woods and Kupp each also had a crucial snag on the final go-ahead drive, to help set up Matt Gay’s 40-yard field goal.

    “I thought Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods were outstanding tonight,” McVay said. “You talk about guys creating on their own, tough catches in crunch time moments.”

    Woods said he felt he and Kupp entered a rhythm with Goff, and that they had their timing down, including when the team went to its tempo offense. At times in the last few weeks, it felt a bit off between Goff and the two receivers, but it clearly clicked against one of the league’s top defenses.

    “I just feel like it was a credit to the game flow, really,” Woods said. “Felt like we were executing on our quick passes, our quick tempo. Really just catching them in some looks. For me, being involved in that quick-pass game and being able to run some routes downfield and keep this offense, the momentum of our drives well. … They stopped our run game pretty well, so our receivers had to step up and (make plays).”

    Have the Rams finally found a kicker?

    The Rams brought in their third kicker of the season this week, Gay, who was drafted in the fifth round by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2019, but was waived by them this September.

    Monday night, Gay recorded a touchback on four of his five kickoffs, something the Rams desperately needed so their coverage unit could get into its lanes. He also hit all three of his extra points — which had been an issue with previous kickers — and then had a slight hiccup on a missed 44-yard field goal attempt in the third quarter, with the game tied 17-17.

    It’s safe to say he made up for it with what ultimately was a game-winning 40-yarder against his former team.

    “You can’t write it,” Gay said. “It’s one of those stories. … The first game you’re activated, you’re going back to the place you were last year, the place you felt you should have been. You get to play on prime time, Monday Night Football. There was a lot of emotion for me coming back in. … It’s definitely a little bit more for me to come back and play in this stadium, and obviously hit that kick.”

    Gay, who was signed on Tuesday, had to wait five days to join his new teammates as he underwent COVID-19 protocols.

    McVay said that when Gay finally got to practice on Saturday — their last day of practice for the week — there was a level of excitement from teammates as they watched him go through his reps.

    That carried into the game.

    “Watching Matt throughout the game, you could feel there was a lot of confidence,” McVay said. “I know he had the one miss, but there’s a difference between a miss and then one of those where you’re like, ‘All right, this looks a little shaky.’ And he was true all night. Great height, good timing. He was very accurate and I loved what he did.”

    McVay, vibrating to the tip of his hair with energy as he did his postgame video interview, gleefully added that Gay looks like he works out with All-Pro defensive tackle Aaron Donald.

    “The kicker’s pretty jacked, man,” he said with a grin. McVay then passed Gay as he left the room, and, off camera, told Gay that assessment in person.

    “Fuckin’ jacked for a kicker, man. Good job, buddy,” McVay said.

    The reality of Jared Goff’s day

    Yes, Goff threw two interceptions and yes, the Bucs scored 10 points off of them.

    There was one truly ugly sequence midway through the fourth quarter, right after the Rams’ defense made a crucial stop, in which the snap was bobbled (Goff fell on it), the offense took a delay-of-game penalty and then Goff threw the second interception.

    Goff said that when the stall hit the offense, with the Rams leading 24-17, it was a product of him making “some dumb decisions, honestly.” McVay said he was proud of the way Goff responded after the second interception, and especially when the Rams got the ball back late, with the game tied, and had to get downfield for what they hoped would be a game-winning drive.

    “I thought Jared continued to demonstrate resilience,” McVay said. “He was outstanding from the jump, and we had one little mistake where he threw the interception on the screen, but what did he do? He just kept competing. … What he did in terms of leading us down the field at the most important moment, I think, was critical.”

    The Rams knew it would be a pass-heavy game from the jump, and had only 20 run plays (their backs averaged just 1.9 yards per carry for a total of 37 yards). Goff threw 51 times, his second-most attempts of the season. His 61-attempt game against Miami perhaps was a mistake, but this high-volume air attack was by design against a stout front seven.

    Interceptions aside, Goff had a pretty good day, notably stepping up in the pocket when Tampa Bay brought heavier pressure. Goff escaped at least one sack and extended a play, and got the ball out on the quicker throws that the Rams needed in order to beat defensive coordinator Todd Bowles’ blitz.

    In fact, Goff was perfect against the blitz in the first half, according to Next Gen Stats, going 10-for-10 for 146 yards and a touchdown. He finished 16 of 18 for 203 yards (of his total 376), two touchdowns and no interceptions when operating against a blitz. One of his interceptions came on a miscue on a screen with running back Darrell Henderson, and the second simply seemed to have been a poor decision by Goff, which he alluded to in his postgame press conference.

    McVay also noted that the Bucs’ defense “did some similar things” as Miami did three weeks earlier — meaning the types of pressures and blitzes — which the Rams knew would happen, considering how disastrously that went for Goff and the offense. The Bucs all-out blitzed Goff on a 19-yard completion to Kupp that set up the Rams for the game-winning field goal. It was Goff’s 50th pass of the game.

    “We had just missed Josh Reynolds (two plays earlier),” McVay said, citing an incomplete pass on an identical play on first down, before the completion to Kupp on third-and-1.

    “I think it says what we expect it to,” McVay said, “that he’s a really good quarterback that just stays steady and neutral throughout the course of the game. I was very proud of Jared tonight. Not surprised, but very proud of him.”

    Woods said that on the sideline before the Rams’ last drive, with the game tied at 24, players could feel the worried energy from the coaching staff about the big moment that approached, but Goff helped keep everyone cool.

    “The whole offense was like, ‘Yeah, don’t let the coaches and the hype build (the moment) up,’” Woods joked. “‘This is a normal situation for us. This is a Thursday practice.’ That’s what we were saying in the huddle.”

    Goff hit Woods on a 23-yard crosser on the first play out of that huddle, and got the Rams to midfield.

    “Set the tone right then and there,” Woods said. “When you make big plays like that to set the tone, it takes the defense’s heart and their pride. From there, you just stay on them.”

    Joe Noteboom steps into big shoes

    In his first start at left tackle, third-year lineman Joe Noteboom largely went unnoticed — and that’s a good thing, considering he was taking over for injured veteran Andrew Whitworth.

    “Joe did great,” Goff said. “Joe did really well. That’s a really tough defensive line. It’s one of the best defensive lines in the league. For him to come in and do what he did … on a Monday Night Football game against a couple of good pass-rushers, and play the way he did, was tremendous.”

    While the Rams overall struggled to run the ball, Woods said Noteboom’s presence was noted on passing downs as the receivers went to work.

    “You gotta think about whose position, whose role he’s filling in,” Woods said. “Big Whit has been holding it down for years. … (Joe) comes in and fills a big role. He has (returning NFL sack leader) Shaq Barrett on that side, and Jason Pierre-Paul.

    “It was really just holding it down, protecting Jared in the pass game, keeping it clean, holding down that edge, holding down his back side.”

    Bottom of The Pile

    • Tampa Bay receiver Mike Evans scored a highlight-reel touchdown early in the second quarter, but it wasn’t against Ramsey in coverage. It was Troy Hill, with Ramsey having floated over to Chris Godwin. McVay was shown running down the sideline to call a timeout because he didn’t like the mismatch, but Brady got the snap off in time. When Ramsey stuck with Evans, as happened on 73 percent of Evans’ routes, he allowed four catches on seven targets for 40 yards, according to Next Gen Stats.

    • Defensive lineman Michael Brockers deserves a shout-out here for the way he flew all over the field. Brockers had a quarterback hit and six tackles, and was key in the effort to contain running backs Ronald Jones and Leonard Fournette. Not all of his good work will show up on the stat sheet, but it certainly did on tape.

    • A win is a win, so I’m not going to pick at McVay too badly here, but I didn’t like the run call on third-and-8 at the Tampa Bay 22-yard line on the Rams’ final drive. It essentially was a throwaway snap, making it clear that the Rams were playing for the field goal and settling for three points instead of a touchdown. I think McVay will call it “having confidence in his kicker and defense,” but Brady got the ball back with 2:36 to play, and that’s just too much time. If not for Fuller’s interceptions, it perhaps would have been a different story. And Brady even flat-out noodle-armed a couple throws, so I wouldn’t expect such a decision to work as well against Russell Wilson or Kyler Murray when things get tight in these upcoming division games.

    • The Rams can’t criticize certain officiating calls without incurring fines from the league, but I have to say that the second pass interference call on Ramsey was a big puzzler from my perspective. I also would not have blown the Brady fumble-but-wait-not-a-fumble dead so quickly — so that the result of the moment could not be fully determined — but honestly, nobody knew what the hell was going on during that play (though it looked like a fumble to me).

    • The Rams are now finally finished with their East Coast travel for the year, after five trips in 11 weeks. Johnson said it best: “Thank the Lord we aren’t coming back here.”

    • The Rams improved to 32-0 under McVay when leading at halftime. “You guys have to stop saying that. Don’t jinx us,” he said after the game. “Don’t say it anymore, please.”

    • Quote of the night (other than “jacked kicker”) came from McVay, speaking about the joyful energy in the locker room: “I think a really good way to put it is the balance of urgency and enjoyment. I think these guys are really finding that right now. I love this group, love this team. Looking forward to enjoying this for a little bit, and then getting back at it in about six hours.”

    #124855
    Hram
    Participant

    “Goff wasn’t much better for Los Angeles, but his playmakers made up for his relatively forgettable outing.”

    What game was he watching? Goff also completed 39 passes and threw for nearly 400 yds and 3 TDs.

    With the exception of his deep balls, I also thought Brady threw the ball well.

    #124863
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    ‘Who Gonna Make That Next Play?’ Jordan Fuller vs. Buccaneers (Week 11) | Mic’d Up

    Go on the sidelines with S Jordan Fuller as he picks off two Tom Brady passes during the Rams Week 11 matchup against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

    Agamemnon

    #124879
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    They go to the Rams at about 21:45 in.

    ==

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