Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › reporters & twitter on the 9ers game
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January 9, 2022 at 7:51 pm #135329znModerator
SeattleRams@seattlerams_nfl
Rams lose while leading at halftime.Rams lose wearing blue/bone.
San Francisco wins again.
Two streaks ended, while one continues.
Axel Kopun@FV_Mylia_Lynn
I muted my TV. So disgusted by the fact the 49ers fans are making this sound like a road game for the Rams.Well, Rams host Cardinals next week – after an emotional, physical OT game today. Not ideal.
Blaine Grisak@bgrisakDTR
Hate to say it…but this loss is on the defense. Can’t allow Jimmy G to march down the field in 87 seconds.Tyler Bearde@tbearde
Sean McVay is going to be kicking himself for going empty on 3rd and one at the end of the first half.Richard Ramsey@Richard95549251
Turning point of the game, without question. The Niners had close to 41 total yards around that time. All he had to do was run for 1 yard and he takes a 17-0 lead into the half. Awful play call…January 9, 2022 at 8:02 pm #135333znModeratorLook at the bright side.. Matthew Stafford can finally add “division winner” to his resume. pic.twitter.com/P5LBrQHgpi
— SeattleRams (@seattlerams_nfl) January 10, 2022
January 9, 2022 at 11:36 pm #135347znModeratorThe Rams blew a big lead to the 49ers and even had a 99.6% chance to win late in the fourth. https://t.co/bsGE5TYHiS
— Rams Wire (@TheRamsWire) January 10, 2022
January 10, 2022 at 1:06 am #135349joemadParticipantStafford played BAD today, but a defense with Donald, Ramsey, Miller and Floyd on it. CAN NOT give up a 17 pt lead. Can’t do it.
— shannon sharpe (@ShannonSharpe) January 10, 2022
January 10, 2022 at 1:07 am #135350joemadParticipantGot OBJ open for the gm winning TD and Stafford under throws him and gets it intercepted. Last 3 weeks Stafford hasn’t played well.. AT ALL.
— shannon sharpe (@ShannonSharpe) January 10, 2022
January 11, 2022 at 11:18 am #135385znModeratorfrom 49ers’ PFF scores show where team dominated Rams in crucial win
https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/49ers/49ers-pff-scores-show-where-team-dominated-rams-crucial-win
Energized by the presence of their fans on the road, the 49ers’ defense overpowered the Rams in their 27-24 overtime win in Los Angeles.
The 49ers’ defensive line shut down the Rams’ run game, only allowing 64 yards rushing and disrupted quarterback Matthew Stafford in the pocket. The Rams were held to 265 yards, their lowest total of the season — 64 yards rushing and 201 passing.
The 49ers won the battle in the trenches. The defensive line pressured Stafford 28 times. On the other side of the ball, the 49ers’ offensive line only allowed seven total pressures of Jimmy Garoppolo.
After a slow start on the offense, Garoppolo took advantage of the time his linemen were giving him while getting all of his skill players involved. Elijah Mitchell took advantage of the holes the line was opening up and got the run game going.
Garoppolo finished the day completing 23 of his 32 attempts to six different receivers for 316 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.
January 11, 2022 at 12:58 pm #135387ZooeyModeratorThe 49ers won the battle in the trenches. The defensive line pressured Stafford 28 times. On the other side of the ball, the 49ers’ offensive line only allowed seven total pressures of Jimmy Garoppolo.
If I was coach, I would start with this fact before the next game against SF.
January 11, 2022 at 3:22 pm #135392znModeratorRodrigue: Rams must sort through their own chaos if they want a sustainable postseason
INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Ahead of a postseason that will probably ultimately be kindest to teams who display the most consistency, it was ominous indeed to see all of the Rams’ varied personalities on display on Sunday afternoon, in a gut-punching 27-24 overtime loss to the San Francisco 49ers.
Sure, they won the NFC West — because the Seahawks beat the Cardinals as the Rams fell in overtime just hours (and what felt like several lifetimes) after a lead that, early in the game, felt solid beneath their feet. The 70,000-square foot video board blared the Rams’ division win in attempted celebration, but it almost felt mocking in its largeness and brightness as Rams players left the field and fumed into the locker room following a sixth straight loss to a team who they had, truly had, in the first half.
“No,” answered cornerback Jalen Ramsey, who secured an interception late in the game that felt for a moment as if it would turn the tide after a third-quarter implosion, when a reporter asked if the NFC West crown was a silver lining amid all the you-know-what. During his two-minute, 35-second appearance at the podium following the loss, Sean McVay concurred with Ramsey.
“In the moment right now, this is a tough feeling,” McVay said. “I don’t know that right now is a time to celebrate that. We’ll look at this film, we’ll clean it up and we’ll move forward the right way. This is a resilient group.”
The road is now tougher.
Now, as the No. 4 seed, they’ll see the Cardinals (1-1 season split) for a third time on Monday night at 5:15 p.m. PT. Ugh, an NFC West team again, after all of this, plus a road that goes through Green Bay only gets tougher from there. A blown 17-point lead held in the first half — which, to add more insult, snapped McVay’s 45-0 streak with a halftime lead — meant watching this group shriek back and forth, up and down between all of the things it can do, all of the things it should do and all of the ways it just can’t seem to help itself. For a team that demonstrated remarkable resilience through chaos that was out of its control earlier in December, the Rams have also made it clear that they can trend all too easily toward the self-inflicted chaos, too.
In the first half, the Rams could do little wrong. Sure, they only scored three points on their opening drive, but it took 8:53 off the clock and they followed it up with a stout defensive series that kept the Jimmy Garoppolo-led 49ers well away from midfield. The Rams offense then added another touchdown, a really slick play call that set up the extra offensive linemen set (in this case Joe Noteboom and Coleman Shelton) that brought them success in the run game in December, but this time, quarterback Matthew Stafford threw a pass over the top to tight end Tyler Higbee (who’d score once more before the end of the first half, which prompted McVay to burst into the end zone from the sideline to celebrate with him). The Rams weren’t running the ball explosively (just 14 net rushing yards, which factor in negative plays) by halftime, but they were doing enough to keep the ball well away from San Francisco and the clock running with drives of 13 and 12 plays to open the game. Defensively, they were setting up long or manageable second or third downs and getting off the field quickly. The time of possession skewed heavily in the Rams’ favor by halftime, 19:53 to 10:07. The Rams ran 33 plays to the 49ers’ 19.
But flashes of the “other” Rams began to force cracks into the smoothness, started to slither through. McVay, who admitted postgame that the 49ers “got after us a little bit,” opted for an empty set on third-and-1, just a few plays after safety Taylor Rapp picked off Garappolo and thus held San Francisco out of scoring position, and the Rams had an opportunity to hammer in a scoring drive in two-minute in the second quarter. Stafford, who opened the game 15-of-16 for 153 yards and two touchdowns, was sacked for a loss on that play as his protection folded and the Rams punted. The 49ers hit two explosive plays (one a pass, the other a catch-and-run) on the other side and were able to avoid a first-half shutout with a field goal.
A defense that had racked up two sacks, five tackles-for-loss and had a takeaway in the first half pivoted toward the extreme in the third quarter.
Pitch plays designed to scheme ball carriers away from the Rams’ formidable first defensive tier, and force the second and third levels to tackle, started working. It was a cruel homage to the bullying of the Rams’ shallow inside linebacking corps of the first matchup, but just adjusted in a way that took some pressure off Garoppolo’s injured hand instead of asking him to pick at that position group via quick throw. The 49ers began to dice away on the ground, punch by punch by punch between the pitches and traditional runs, and their downs and distances that were suffocated by the Rams defense in the first half became much more manageable. A Rams defense that allowed 10 net rushing yards in the first half ultimately gave up 135. San Francisco scored 17 unanswered points as the Rams reeled in juxtaposition against their first-half selves, even falling for a trick play touchdown pass thrown by thorn-in-their-side all-purpose player Deebo Samuel.
And on the other side of the ball, the Rams stalled. Cooper Kupp, who finished the game in historic fashion as the Triple Crown winner (the NFL’s single-season leader in catches, receiving yards and touchdowns), didn’t get a target in the third quarter. After the game became tied with 1:53 left in the third quarter, Stafford was sacked on first down for a loss of six yards. Then he missed a safety-valve pass to running back Sony Michel on second-and-16, then he was intercepted on a deep shot — an arm-punt, sure, and many can justify it as such, but a wasted drive all the same when drives could not be wasted.
In the fourth quarter, that other Rams personality (the one who started the game) fought back against its sloppier self. Ramsey, who took command of the defensive signal-calling mid-series after starting safety and team captain Jordan Fuller left the game with an ankle injury, had an incredible, acrobatic interception of Garoppolo inside the red zone. The Rams went 92 yards in the other direction on a drive that featured plenty of Kupp (he had catches of 18 and 30 yards, plus a touchdown), and the only truly explosive run play of the game, a hard-earned 14 yards by Michel.
The Rams defense forced a three-and-out on the following San Francisco drive, with help via a third-and-long sack by Von Miller for a 9-yard loss. But then the Rams, who finished the game with 64 net rushing yards, ran the ball on three consecutive plays — an apparent effort by McVay to threaten the clock by keeping the ball on the ground and force the 49ers to use all of their timeouts inside the two-minute warning.
But what is the difference between calculated patience and overthought conservatism? For McVay, it was in all of one down of his choosing — it could have been on any of the first, second or third downs on which he instead ran the ball, on the other side of the final two-minute warning and with a seven-point lead — where he could have passed or called a catch-and-run designed play to try to get past the sticks and still kill some time. But after two failed run plays (are those the only way to kill a clock?) on third-and-7, Michel’s run gained two yards and the Rams punted at their 45-yard line, re-applying the pressure back on a defense that had just lost its surest safety and signal-caller (and in fact finished the game with reserves Nick Scott and Terrell Burgess, as Rapp appeared to suffer an injury that was not addressed postgame). It’s easy to be an armchair quarterback, sure, but couldn’t the Rams have gone for the jugular — a conversion — instead of opting for a full sequence of plays that had been among their most inefficient to that point? And what’s the point, if it’s all just to punt?
“Not to my knowledge,” said Stafford postgame, on whether there was any discussion of throwing the ball on that specific third down. “We’ve got a really good defense, we trust those guys. San Fran did a nice job of driving down and scoring, there’s no question. They made the plays there. … Wish we could have gotten the first down there and kneeled it out, absolutely. As a competitor, as an offensive player, you want to have that opportunity. There’s no better play in football than taking a knee with the win. But we didn’t get that opportunity, we didn’t earn that opportunity.”
Added Kupp, “We have to do a better job finishing. The situation on offense, where we have the ball on the field and we get a first down, we can really put it away. We don’t do a good enough job, and obviously we give the 49ers another chance with the ball. … I think there’s some execution stuff just during the course of the game that, certainly, you want to try to get out of those lulls. Every football game is going to have them, the ebbs and flows of the game (and) you hit those valleys — but how quickly can you pull yourself out of it, find a way to get yourself a first down, move the ball down the field? We have to do a better job of clicking out of those things a little bit better, a little faster.”
Of course, you know the rest. San Francisco capitalized on all of the Rams’ chaos they had invited to swirl around themselves, in the gaps forced wide by inconsistency and mistakes. Garoppolo hit Brandon Aiyuk on another catch-and-run that pinballed would-be Rams tacklers (again). Then he hit Samuel on a 43-yarder, then Jauan Jennings for a 14-yard score over a middle portion of the field that we’ve often seen occupied by Fuller, with 1:01 left in regulation.
In overtime, 49ers kicker Robbie Gould chipped in a 24-yard field goal. Stafford’s three overtime-opening incompletions drew a bit of luck, via a pass-interference penalty that incensed the too-loud, too-populated road crowd that had also forced the Rams to go to a silent count on a few occasions in their own stadium. Stafford threw an interception on a deep shot to Odell Beckham Jr. on first down with time on the clock, just a couple of plays later. A bit of positive progress glimmered, only to see chaos flood back in return. This time, it got the last word.
“I just left it short,” said Stafford. But that’s a ball to Beckham, and a play call, that has in truth led to an interception more frequently than not over the past eight weeks as a quarterback and a still-new receiver have tried to sort out their timing, so it at best remains a puzzling decision in that moment. Over-thinking by the play caller and under-throwing by the quarterback is not a recipe for long-term success in the postseason. And while the Rams have shown remarkable resilience in key points of this season — and that’s certainly a part of why they’ve clinched the NFC West, a feat not to be sneered at — there comes a point when the chaos is too much to overcome, particularly the kind that sends this team fluctuating between championship-caliber play and flatline. The stakes have never been higher in the Rams’ season-long search for consistency.
After the game, Kupp took the podium and had just begun speaking when alarms began to blare throughout the stadium, signaling an “emergency situation” that ultimately was explained away as a false alarm. For a few minutes, though, as the speakers echoed and shrilled and chaos ensued on the stadium’s ground level, and inside the press room, Kupp tried to talk under the noise and finish out the questioning as evenly as he could, considering the cacophony around him.
The Rams may not have triggered that particular alarm themselves, but the red lights and bells are flashing around them as they walk to the precipice of the postseason.
It’s time they collect themselves — all of their selves.
January 17, 2022 at 1:00 pm #135348joemadParticipantGot OBJ open for the gm winning TD and Stafford under throws him and gets it intercepted. Last 3 weeks Stafford hasn’t played well.. AT ALL.
— shannon sharpe (@ShannonSharpe) January 10, 2022
Stafford played BAD today, but a defense with Donald, Ramsey, Miller and Floyd on it. CAN NOT give up a 17 pt lead. Can’t do it.
— shannon sharpe (@ShannonSharpe) January 10, 2022
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