Patz game: tweets, plays, articles, highlights

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Rams Huddle Patz game: tweets, plays, articles, highlights

  • This topic has 12 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 1 month ago by Avatar photozn.
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  • #153342
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    Gary Klein@LATimesklein
    Final: Rams 28, Patriots 22. Matthew Stafford passes for four touchdowns as Rams improve to 5-5.

    Sarah Barshop@sarahbarshop
    The Rams continue to fall behind early in games. They have been outscored by 50 points in first quarters this season, which is the worst in the NFL.

    But. A Byron Young sack and a Kam Kinchens interception seals this for the Rams

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    They’re still growing up, but the energy and effort this young DL plays with is creating big moments every single week at this point.

    Lots of improvement for this Rams offense in key areas today after that first quarter.

    Sean McVay, along with praise for the OL today, shouts out former Pats center and current Rams OL coach Ryan Wendell.

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Rams were averaging 9 yards per play for much of the game until the last drive.

    Finish with 28 points, 4 passing TDs, 2 receivers over 100 yds, 107 rushing, and 7.9 yards/play.

    No sacks allowed. No turnovers for the first time since W3.

    Ramblin’ Fan@RamblinFan
    Loved rookie center Beaux Limmer on the Rams as soon as they drafted him. He is one of those Day 3 diamonds-in-the-rough that seems to be GM Les Snead’s forte.

    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    With [his first] touchdown to Cooper Kupp, Matthew Stafford (367 career) has passed Eli Manning (366) for sole possession of 10th on the NFL’s all-time career passing TDs list.

    Jim Youngblood 53@53_jim70721
    Rams 3 sack 2 run TFLs, 1 pick. 387 yards allowed, 125 rushing yards allowed

    Rams living in dime, Rozeboom and McCullough are the LBers — large amount of downs in 4th Q …

    Patriots cannot run a lot … comes down to pass rush. Rams rush > offensive protection

    Offense was making chunk plays Would like 3rddown and redzone to improve but — team win

    Rams Bros.@RamsBrothers
    Rams blocked an extra point! Huge, turned it into a 2-possession game. They’ve gotten a couple of these over the last few weeks. Not easy to do, but credit to ST — they seemed incapable of things like this last year

    #153343
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    #153348
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    from https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/11/17/24298994/rams-patriots-winners-losers-beaux-limmer?utm_content=turfshowtimes&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=socialflow&utm_source=twitter

    Offensive line & pass protection

    I think this was easily the OL’s cleanest effort on the 2024 season so far. For the third time in the last four games, the big guys up front did not allow a single sack on Stafford. It’s probably no coincidence that two of Stafford’s best individual outings have come in games where he was kept clean.

    The running game averaged 5.35 yards per carry with Kyren Williams accounting for 86 of those yards and Blake Corum adding 21.

    I don’t think the degree of difficulty was too high against the Patriots. I wrote before the game that most were giving Jerod Mayo’s defensive unit too much credit after a dominating performance against the Chicago Bears. Still, the pass protection was beyond solid today and that is a rising tide that lifted all boats on the offensive side of the ball.

    #153350
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    #153351
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    #153352
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    #153353
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    #153354
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    #153361
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    #153364
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    Rams Top Plays In Week 11 Win Over Patriots

    #153368
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    Los Angeles Rams PR@TheLARamsPR
    QB Matthew Stafford recorded his 57th game with three-or-more passing touchdowns, passing Ben Roethlisberger (56) for the eighth-most such games in NFL history.

    Los Angeles Rams PR@TheLARamsPR
    WR Cooper Kupp (@CooperKupp) recorded his 54th receiving touchdown and passed Elroy Hirsch (53) for third place on the franchise’s receiving touchdowns list.

    #153370
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    RAMMAN76

    Some game stats

    A well-balanced game in passes vs runs: 27/Att in passing, 24/att in runs

    Stafford
    295 yards on 18-of-27 passing, four touchdowns, passer rating of 142.7
    10th all time TD’s in NFL

    Nacua
    Seven catches, 123 yards and a touchdown

    Kupp
    Six catches, 106 yards and 2 touchdowns
    He’s now #3 on the Rams all time TD list behind Bruce and Holt.

    Kyren Williams 86 yards rushing; averaged 5.35 yards per carry

    Defense had 3/sacks, 5/QB hits, 6/TFL, 1/INT

    Braden Fiske
    2 sacks and a strip

    Kobie Turner
    seven tackles, batted pass, fumble recovery.

    1/INT by Kinchens

    #153374
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    As Rams eye another playoff chase, the little details could make or break them

    Jourdan Rodrigue

    https://x.com/JourdanRodrigue?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor

    FOXBORO, Mass. — What a perfect setting, in a place with such a storied previous reputation for winning by emphasizing the details, to consider the important little moments and decisions within a game.

    The Los Angeles Rams (5-5) beat the New England Patriots (3-8) on Sunday afternoon at Gillette Stadium, the hallowed halls of a program once known for its meticulousness, its understanding of all of the margins that must be exploited within a 60-minute window, and that is now in the process of finding its way in a new era.

    The details made the difference for the Rams in the 28-22 win but could have broken them, too. That is the story of their season right now and likely will be in the coming weeks as they hope to go on another fairytale ride with this group of players.

    Take their offensive line, for example: After a one-week experiment with veteran guard Jonah Jackson at center (where he has only gotten about 15 practices because of injuries and overall readjustments by Rams brass at the center/left guard positions), rookie Beaux Limmer got his starting job back. He and the rest of the line kept quarterback Matthew Stafford off the ground (no sacks, four hits) and handled New England’s pressure well, even if at times Stafford rushed throws or targeted other options in light of it. That an impact decision at center manifested in a place where the position coach — who has been working long hours to get Limmer up to speed and to establish an identity within the much-maligned group this season — used to start at center was all the more poetic.

    Coach Sean McVay was sure to shout out offensive line coach Ryan Wendell, “Wendy,” the former Patriots center, in his postgame news conference, and his players knew what the win meant to him.

    Right tackle Warren McClendon added that Limmer stepped right back into the job like he “never skipped a beat,” and McVay was particularly impressed with the left side of the offensive line, where second-year guard Steve Avila played his second game back from injury. Running back Kyren Williams and backup Blake Corum read their gaps and creases well, especially after the first quarter (more on that period in a moment). Williams’ 86 yards on 15 carries were punctuated by an 18-yard run in the first quarter, his longest since Week 5 (his 5.7 yards per carry was almost 2 yards higher than his average entering the game).

    “I thought our left side did an excellent job. You can see Alaric (Jackson) was really coming off the football. Steve did a great job. I was proud of the group overall,” McVay said, adding that the possessions in which the Rams did string together several chunk runs “is what offensive ball should look like when it’s quality.”

    Williams said that at one point as the Rams began to run the ball well in the second and third quarters, he could hear the Patriots defenders calling out their plays — but they weren’t able to stop them.

    “I felt good, I was saying, ‘I was all on that stuff,’” Williams said. “I was seeing what I needed to see, hitting what I needed to hit. (Those) guys made the blocks up front and I was just reading them and playing (like) who I am.

    “We were moving the ball. Left, right, outside zone. … It really didn’t matter, we were calling our spots (and) they were literally our plays out there, saying that we were running the same play. We were running the same play! And we were still being efficient. I feel like that’s who those guys (are) and the work they put in this week to get the run game started and going.”

    Williams, chafing at himself for missing a pressure pickup off the edge, homed in on the details in a 69-yard touchdown from Stafford to receiver Cooper Kupp (Kupp’s second of the game) up the seam. Williams had the interior pressure assignment that time, against the Patriots’ Cover 0 blitz.

    “They brought my ‘backer, I was able to pick him up,” Williams said, “that feels good. That’s good ball. … Matthew was going through his cadence. When he gave us the first “Turbo” (as in, “Turbo … SET”), the linebacker started inching up. I was like, ‘OK, I know he’s coming in.’ That’s my guy anyway. We talk about taking the air out, being able to get to the line of scrimmage and … creating no space between you and the linebacker so that gives him one way to go: outside, or into you.

    “He chose to play into me. I set back, anchored. … I fought through the down and Matthew was able to get it out (for a) touchdown. It was sweet.”

    There was a fun detail hidden inside that play for Stafford and Kupp, too. It is remarkably similar to the “for the love of the game” concept that set up the Rams’ game-winning field goal against the Tom Brady-led Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFC divisional round a few years ago. Back then, and against the same type of pressure, that ball was never thrown until one night it was. Years later, Kupp and Stafford are able to make an adjustment on the route and with the timing of the throw to, as Stafford said with a smile, make “the likelihood of getting the ball today … higher than it was in that Tampa one.”

    Even rookie safety Kam Kinchens’ game-sealing interception on the Patriots’ final drive ended with a crucial detail: Slide! Kinchens laughed after the game when walking me through the play.

    “After I caught it, my mind was to run and score a touchdown because it was open to me,” he said, “When (I) catch a pick, it’s go time. But luckily I got ‘Boom’ (Christian Rozeboom). He got right in front of me and said, ‘GO DOWN.’ So I made sure (to slide).” Kinchens added a little intentional gusto to the slide, too.

    But other details, other small moments that compounded into larger issues threatened to derail the Rams:

    • They continue to start games in stunningly slow fashion. Sunday, they were scoreless in the first quarter for the seventh time this season and failed to convert two key third downs on back-to-back possessions, both around midfield. Deep into the fourth quarter, they couldn’t close the game out, either, failing to convert on third-and-6 and quite literally leaving the game in the hands of Kinchens and the defense.

    • Rookie kicker Joshua Karty missed a 26-yard field goal attempt at the end of the second quarter that banged off the right post.

    Karty has missed four field goals this year, after a perfect three-game start (he did not kick a field goal in weeks 5 or 8).

    The inconsistency in part prompted McVay to punt the ball after a three-and-out with 2:22 left, up by just 6 points and from the New England 35-yard line.

    “There wasn’t a lot of reason to feel great about that operation today,” he said.

    • Penalty issues and mental errors popped up for a defense that had otherwise played well, including an early strip-sack and fumble recovery in the second quarter that set up a 12-yard touchdown to Puka Nacua a play later. In the third quarter, Patriots quarterback Drake Maye led his offense on a touchdown drive that made it a two-score game. Thirty yards were gifted to Maye and his group because outside linebacker Jared Verse was flagged for a personal foul after a play near the sideline and outside linebacker Byron Young had a face-mask flag (which was more like a clothesline of the offensive player). New England ultimately scored on the next possession (a field goal) while the Rams’ offense stalled once again with a three-and-out before the Patriots added another 3 points.

    “When you’ve got a young, youthful group, they’ve got a great spirit about them,” McVay said. “How do we rein them in and not allow them to extend drives by (penalties)? That’s absolutely something we’ve got to be mindful of. We’ll get it fixed. Our guys are the right kinds of guys, I have no doubt. That could have cost us and, fortunately, we don’t have to learn the hard way. I trust we’ll be better moving forward.”

    That last sentence carries a lot of weight about the potential McVay believes the Rams have overall. Indeed, they showed a long look at who they can be, as long as they stay in the details.

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