reporters etc. on the ARZ game

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  • #108836
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    Lindsey Thiry@LindseyThiry
    The Rams lead the Cardinals, 20-0, at halftime. Jared Goff has taken advantage of a weak Cardinals defense, passing for 323 yards and a touchdown. Tight end Tyler Higbee has a career-high 107 yards on 7 catches. The Rams defense has stifled Kyler Murray, sacking the rookie quarterback three times.

    Higbee has a career-high 108 receiving yards and there’s still a second half to play against the Cardinals.

    Tyler Higbee is the 2nd tight end with 100 receiving yards in a half this season. The other is his teammate, Gerald Everett, per @ESPNStatsInfo

    Bob McManaman@azbobbymac
    Robert Woods has 9 catches for 113 yards, TE Tyler Higbee 7 catches for 107 yards and the Rams have 21 first downs to Arizona’s 3. Putrid game thus far by the Cards.

    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    Jared Goff has his first 300-yard game since Week 8. He has 323 yards so far, and it’s only halftime.

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Season-high 20 first half points for the @RamsNFL

    Rich Hammond@Rich_Hammond
    Quiet day for the anti-Goff brigade.

    The Rams have returned to the field for the second half and, out of contractual obligation, so have the Cardinals.

    #108837
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    Rams24/7@Rams24_7
    I bet coach Kromer is gonna be working on hand placement with Edwards this week

    TurfShowTimes@TurfShowTimes
    #LARams might be the worst at power A gap runs on 3rd/4th & short. Success rate has to be under like 25%

    Gary Klein@LATimesklein
    Gurley stopped on fourth down. He has 96 yards rushing. Will McVay put him back in to break 100 for first time this season?

    Rams24/7@Rams24_7
    Woods passes his previous career high (171) with his 14th catch for 172 yards

    Rams Talk@TalkRams
    I know, I know, it’s the #AZCardinals. But this a team that has been competitive in every game this season. First time blown out. Not partying like we won the Super Bowl, but it’s a nice step forward through three quarters.

    #108841
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    #108842
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    #108843
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    #108845
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    #108846
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    #108847
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    NFL Research@NFLResearch
    Rams beat the Cardinals for the 5th straight time.

    The Rams are the first team in NFL history to win 5 straight games vs a single opponent by scoring 30+ points and holding the opponent to fewer than 17 points in each game.

    DOWNTOWN RAMS [DTR]@DowntownRams
    #Rams win 34-7. Improve to 7-5. We are all #Seahawks fans (that hurt to say) tomorrow night.

    Lindsey Thiry@LindseyThiry
    Rams win 34-7, turn their attention to tomorrow’s game against the Seahawks and Vikings.

    They’ll play Seahawks on Sunday.
    They’ll hope Vikings lose tomorrow.

    Kent Somers@kentsomers
    Rams 549 yards are 6th most by a Cardinals opponent since the merger in 1970. Third most since team moved to Arizona in 1988. per @pfref

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    Most Regular Season Wins
    Rams Coaching History

    75 – John Robinson (143 games)
    69 – Chuck Know (118)
    53 – Mike Martz (85)
    49 – George Allen (70)
    40 – Ray Malavasi (73)
    31 – Jeff Fisher (77)
    31 – Sean McVay (43)

    Sosa K@QBsMVP
    Starting defense pitched a shutout. Backups got scored on immediately. That’s the most impressive part of today’s game and what I came away with. Happy to see them respond in a major way after getting embarrassed by BAL. ARI scheme + O is solid. Very impressive performance.

    #108862
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    #108863
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    #108864
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    #108865
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    #108871
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    #108872
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    PFF ReFocused: Los Angeles Rams 34, Arizona Cardinals 7

    https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-week-13-pff-refocused-los-angeles-rams-34-arizona-cardinals-7

    Final Score
    Los Angeles Rams 34, Arizona Cardinals 7

    LOS ANGELES RAMS

    Wide receiver Robert Woods had a huge day against a Cardinals secondary that had a tough time staying with him on crossing routes. Woods also showcased his abilities after the catch, turning a screen pass into a big play as he was able to outrace the defense as he cut back across the field.

    When Jared Goff had time in the pocket, he delivered. Most of his completions came reasonably easily against the Cardinals’ secondary, but the touchdown throw to Cooper Kupp on an out route was a perfectly thrown ball. Goff completed 32-of-43 passes for 424 yards and two touchdowns in what was perhaps his best performance of the season.

    Taylor Rapp was a force on the back end of the Rams’ defense, especially in coverage. Targeted five times in primary coverage, Rapp allowed only two receptions, forced an incompletion and tallied an interception, though he did let another pick slip through his fingers.

    Interior defender Michael Brockers was a nuisance for the Cards all game long. He recorded a handful of pressures and won a large percentage of his pass-rushing matchups in this one.

    ARIZONA CARDINALS

    This will likely be a game for quarterback Kyler Murray to forget. After doing such a fantastic job of taking care of the ball for the majority of the 2019 season, Murray let slip several turnover-worthy plays in this game, and he was lucky to leave the game with just one interception on his box score record.

    Larry Fitzgerald, as he always has been, was a reliable option for his quarterback against an NFC West foe. He caught all six of his catchable targets for four first downs and one explosive play in the game, earning high marks overall and as a receiver.

    The Cardinals’ secondary looked lost throughout the game, but nobody looked more out of place than Byron Murphy when he was matched up against Robert Woods.

    When the Cardinals were able to get pressure, they were able to force inaccurate throws from Goff. Chandler Jones didn’t register much pressure in the game against Andrew Whitworth, but the team was able to get some pressure up the middle from Jonathan Bullard and Corey Peters.

    #108877
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    Vincent Bonsignore@VinnyBonsignore
    Lamar Jackson, Patrick Mahomes and Jared Goff are three recent examples of why the @Raiders drafting a QB doesn’t mean it automatically stalls the process. In fact it might speed it up.

    Gabem602@gabem602
    You’re on crack if you really believe this. Don’t let a win over a bad Cardinals team distract you from the fact Goff has been absolutely trash this season.

    Vincent Bonsignore@VinnyBonsignore
    He’s also been very, very good when protected and with solid pieces around him. The facts the numbers the wins the division titles the conference championship back that up

    #108879
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    Greg Beacham@gregbeacham
    The Rams improve to 19-5 away from home under Sean McVay. What a remarkable number.

    #108888
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    Turns in vintage performance
    https://www.rotowire.com/football/player.php?id=10729&refer=SportsRef

    Goff completed 32 of his 43 pass attempts for 424 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions in the team’s Week 13 win over the Cardinals.

    ANALYSIS
    The Rams prioritized getting Goff on track early, as he had 31 pass attempts and 323 passing yards through the first two quarters. Though his volume was limited thereafter due to game context, Goff put together his most accurate performance of the season, completing 74 percent of his passes while averaging 9.9 yards per attempt. He also posted his first multi-touchdown game since Week 8 against Cincinnati. Though this was a positive matchup that Goff should have capitalized on, he should be in position to put together another strong performance in Week 14 against Seattle.

    #108897
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    #108903
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    Sean McVay helped Jared Goff, and five other observations from the Rams’ blowout win

    Rich Hammond

    https://theathletic.com/1427050/2019/12/02/sean-mcvay-helped-jared-goff-and-five-other-observations-from-the-rams-blowout-win/?=twittered

    In an NFL version of an ink-blot test, the Rams slid Jared Goff in front of viewers’ eyes Sunday afternoon.

    Which image showed up? That of a skilled quarterback returning to form, or an average quarterback carving an awful Arizona Cardinals defense? Too often, the answer depends on one’s established bias After watching him in high-profile situations for three-plus years, most people have made up their minds about Goff.

    Which is a shame, because in many ways Goff is still a work in progress at age 25 and is a product of the people around him. That includes, in no particular order, the Rams’ offensive linemen, running back Todd Gurley and coach Sean McVay. Goff, as the quarterback, certainly is the high-performance driver of the Rams’ offense, but how far can he take it if one or two of the wheels go flat?

    That’s not meant to inoculate Goff from criticism. Too often this season, he has looked skittish in the pocket, has made bad decisions with the ball and generally has not looked like a confident leader on the field. These are legitimate knocks, and Goff is not merely a victim of people letting him down.

    Sunday’s game, however, showed what can still happen for the Rams’ offense when everything is clicking, as Goff completed 32 of 43 attempts for 424 yards, two touchdowns and zero interceptions.

    “It was a great game for Jared,” McVay said, “but that was the game that we expect from him. Those are the things that we know he’s capable of, and it’s always a collaboration of the unit. But I was really pleased with his ability to command and control the game and I thought it was one of his best performances for sure, and that was needed for our team.”

    Yes, the Cardinals have the worst pass defense in the NFL, but it’s not as though the Rams just dropped in a quarter in a slot at the entrance to the stadium and automatically got 549 yards. They still had to execute, and across the board they did, arguably better than in any other game this season.

    It all goes back to McVay. Too often this season (and even going back to the end of last season) he has been slow to make adjustments, either from week to week or within games. It’s fair, then, to note that in two of the past three games, McVay’s game plan has been solid and put the Rams in position to win.

    Two weeks ago against Chicago, McVay probably didn’t know what to expect from a revamped offensive line, so he went primarily with two-tight-end sets and ran the ball a lot and the Rams grinded to a 17-7 victory. Last week against Baltimore, well, the whole team was terrible, and McVay stood at the front of that line.

    McVay rebounded this week. His early game plan centered around having Goff under center, then executing play-action fakes. The Cardinals bought it, over and over. The Rams didn’t take big, unnecessary chances down the field but still picked apart the Cardinals’ secondary and McVay did a nice job of emphasizing Tyler Higbee, certainly aware of Arizona’s previous difficulties against tight ends.

    Goff was sacked only once, and McVay did a nice job at times of rolling him out after some of those play-action fakes. It’s something the Rams should have been doing more of in previous games. Goff isn’t speedy, but he’s also far from clumsy when he leaves the pocket, and he has the ability to make throws on the move.

    Finally, perhaps to the chagrin of critics who have already certified him as a bust, Goff had a very good game, perhaps his best of the season. Never mind the numbers. The Rams’ pass plays showed Goff to be calm, making good decisions and stepping into his throws with confidence.

    “I was definitely better,” Goff said. “We all were. It was a full team effort.”

    One persistent criticism of Goff is that he can’t win games by himself, that things need to be near-perfect around him in order for him to thrive. There’s some evidence of that. Goff is increasingly proving himself to be a boom-or-bust quarterback, with ratings that swing wildly. Since late October, Goff has had game ratings of 119.3 and 120.7. His other three ratings were 51.2, 69.9 and 62.0. There’s no middle ground right now.

    That’s part of what makes Goff such a target for debate, and such debate should continue. But even Goff’s harshest critics should be able to praise him when he has a strong game. He did Sunday, and here are five more takeaways from the Rams’ 34-7 victory over the Cardinals:

    Gurley quietly strong

    Are the Rams finding a groove when it comes to Todd Gurley? Sunday’s game presented a best-case scenario, as the Rams never trailed and were able to maintain a comfortable run-pass balance.

    Gurley finished with 19 carries for 95 yards and one touchdown, and also caught a 20-yard pass. (Gurley also had a 28-yard touchdown run brought back for a holding penalty late in the third quarter.) Gurley now has exceeded 18 carries twice this season, against the Cardinals and two weeks earlier against the Bears, when he had 25 carries for 97 yards. Gurley also averaged 5.0 yards per carry against the Cardinals, only the third time in 11 games this season he reached that number.

    The Rams’ goal all season was to have Gurley healthy and productive in December. Now they’ve arrived and he’s 1-for-1, but with an interesting game ahead. The Rams play Seattle at the Coliseum on Sunday night. In the teams’ first meeting in October, the game was close throughout but Goff attempted 49 passes while Gurley had only 15 rushing attempts. That balance must be closer this time.

    Four out of five isn’t bad

    As noted earlier, McVay helped out the offensive line by rolling Goff out more often against the Cardinals. Even so, credit tackles Andrew Whitworth and Bobby Evans for keeping outside pressure to a minimum.

    Whitworth has rebounded after an odd, early-season run of poor play and he’s been just fine down the stretch. Evans, a 22-year-old rookie out of Oklahoma, looks to be a keeper. Evans had a strong debut against Chicago, but skeptics wondered how he would perform when not protected by the Rams’ two-tight-end set. Nothing is ever perfect, but Evans looks quite comfortable and will improve.

    The only issue for the Rams was inside. Rookie right guard David Edwards is understandably going to have some consistency issues, but he committed four penalties and that’s not acceptable.

    Zuerlein danger zone

    There’s something odd going on with Rams kicker Greg Zuerlein, who missed a 41-yard field goal in the first quarter Sunday. Zuerlein now has missed six of his 28 field-goal attempts this season. In 2017 and 2018 combined, Zuerlein missed only six of his 71 attempts. But that’s not the weird part.

    Zuerlein has been solid from distance this season, as he is 4-for-5 from beyond 50 yards and 7 of 9 from 45 yards or beyond. Zuerlein also has been fine up close, as he is 14-for-14 on field-goal attempts from 39 yards or fewer, plus 29-for-29 on extra-point attempts.

    The mid-range field-goal attempts are killing Zuerlein, though. He has missed four of five attempts from 40 to 44 yards this season. He has one make, from 44, and misses from 40, 41 (twice) and 44.

    Zuerlein has remained very consistent, since 2017, in every area except those low-40s field-goal attempts, and there don’t seem to be any trends in terms of turf, weather or situation. He’s just missing them, and that’s a bit troubling.

    Rookie of the year

    Among Rams rookies, most of the immediate post-draft attention went to running back Darrell Henderson and defensive lineman Greg Gaines, even though safety Taylor Rapp was the highest pick at No. 61.

    It’s now clear that Rapp is the star of the rookie class. Rapp started the season in a smaller, sub-package role, but grew into something bigger, both because of the shoulder injury to star safety John Johnson and because of Rapp’s own solid play.

    Rapp has now started six consecutive games and had his NFL highlight moment Sunday, when he intercepted a Kyler Murray pass and returned it 31 yards for a touchdown. Rapp’s first career NFL interception was a long time coming, given that he had two others overturned by penalty.

    The Rams clearly have a keeper in Rapp, and the interception helped illustrate why. After the snap, on a second-and-10 play from the Arizona 25, Rapp briefly bit on the Cardinals’ play-action fake, but quickly read Murray’s intentions, ran back and made an athletic play to intercept a ball headed toward Larry Fitzgerald. Rapp maintained body control and ran for the end zone.

    Johnson and Rapp seem headed toward a successful long-term partnership, which will make the transition away from veteran safety Eric Weddle easier (as soon as next season).

    “As the season progresses,” Rapp said, “you start to feel more comfortable and play loose and you try to make plays. I feel like I’ve been able to feel more comfortable game-in and game-out, keep progressing. Now I finally feel like I’m just out there playing loose.”

    Late bloomer?

    Anyone who watched Tyler Higbee in training camp, before his 2016 rookie season, saw potential. The fourth-round draft pick out of Western Kentucky quickly developed chemistry with Goff, his then-roommate, and the 6-foot-6 Higbee looked as though he might be a red-zone target for the Rams.

    It never happened, and over the years, Higbee developed more value as a run-blocker as the Rams drafted and developed Gerald Everett as more of a pass-catching threat at tight end.

    On Sunday, though, with Everett out because of a knee injury, the Rams turned to Higbee in an attempt to exploit the Cardinals’ struggles to cover tight ends. It worked, as Higbee recorded a career-high 107 yards (and one touchdown) on seven receptions.

    “I had a college coach tell me and I’ve said it before, ‘Just prove to be reliable,’” Higbee said. “When they call your number and it’s your turn to make a play, just make the play. That’s all I’m trying to do.”

    Higbee likely never will be a dynamic threat in the pass game, but he’s solid, with 33 receptions this season on 41 targets, and he has earned Goff’s trust in difficult situations.

    “Tyler showed what he can do,” Goff said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if he continued to get the ball like that.”

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