reporters violently blast the BEARS game

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  • #34149
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams disappear in blowout loss to Bears

    Joe Lyons

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/rams-disappear-in-blowout-loss-to-bears/article_2b88bab5-6615-5739-8b6f-f65b0bddb888.html

    Looking for a chance for three consecutive home victories, the Rams fell 37-13 to the visiting Chicago Bears on Sunday before the biggest crowd of the year at the Edward Jones Dome.

    But a good number of those fans, in town to support the visiting Bears, left happy.

    Both teams are 4-5.

    The Rams hit the road for their next two, playing Nov. 22 at Baltimore and Nov. 29 at Cincinnati. The next home game is Dec. 6 against the Arizona Cardinals.

    The Bears, who rallied to win 22-19 Monday in San Diego, beat the Rams in a variety of ways. They used a quick-strike attack, scoring on long pass-and-catch plays to tight end Zach Miller (87 yards) and running back Jeremy Langford (83 yards) and on a 2-yard pass from Jay Cutler to Miller that capped a 12-play drive that took 7:06 off the clock.

    Chicago broke open a 10-10 game with 14 second-quarter points and never looked back.

    The Bears added to their lead early in the final quarter, driving 61 yards on 12 plays and going up 27-13 when Robbie Gould booted a 37-yard field goal with 11:24 to play in the game.

    The Rams gambled with about 10 minutes to play, but a fake punt from the St. Louis 18 fell incomplete when Cody Davis wasn’t able to come up with a low throw from punter Johnny Hekker on a fourth-and 11 play. Four plays later, after the Rams’ defense held, Gould converted from 36-yards out, stretching Chicago’s lead to 30-13 with 8:05 left in the game.

    After a fourth-down pass try by the Rams fell incomplete, Chicago took advantage of another short field to move ahead 37-13 when Langford scored on a 6-yard run with 4:55 to play.

    With 4:02 to play, the Bears’ Willie Young picked off a Nick Foles pass near midfield and returned it 29 yards to the Rams’ 15. On the return, St. Louis Rams’ rookie guard Jamon Brown was injured. He was carted from the field with what looked to be a right knee injury.

    The Rams got the ball back — on a big hit by Rodney McLeod, Aaron Donald picked up the loose ball and returned it 40 yards to the Chicago 45. On the ensuing series, Case Keenum took over at quarterback for Nick Foles.

    #34152
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams Report Card vs. Chicago Bears

    Here’s how columnist Jeff Gordon graded the Rams after their 37-17 loss to the Chicago Bears on Nov. 15, 2015.

    http://www.stltoday.com/gallery/sports/football/professional/rams-report-card-vs-chicago-bears/collection_862ef76a-ea1e-5fc9-a6b8-b2d96a2681ac.html#0

    #34153
    Avatar photonittany ram
    Moderator

    Well, there’s no way we should expect victories against either of those teams based on the way the Rams played today. Plus Havenstein’s status is uncertain and Brown is done for the year. Probably looking at 4 – 7.

    #34160
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Jim Thomas ‏@jthom1
    No excuses from defense, which played its worst game of year. They were kept off-balance all day by play-calling of Martz protégé Adam Gase

    #34161
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Well, there’s no way we should expect victories against either of those teams based on the way the Rams played today. Plus Havenstein’s status is uncertain and Brown is done for the year. Probably looking at 4 – 7.

    Did you see the game? What do you think happened
    today? I mean…WTF? None of us
    was expecting anything like THIS.
    Good lord.

    w
    v

    #34165
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Did you see the game? What do you think happened
    today? I mean…WTF? None of us
    was expecting anything like THIS.
    Good lord.

    It;s not the same team, anywhere down the line, with both DEs being mostly silent.

    Plus. Bad tackling showed up again on D.

    Plus. The penalties and horribly timed mistakes showed up again on O. Negating 1st downs and one TD.

    Plus. Foles was a mess. He’s not the least bit confident right now. He’s not the guy we saw in the Seattle game.

    Plus. Hekker blew a fake. In Rams territory.

    Everything that could go wrong, did.

    #34168
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Did you see the game? What do you think happened
    today? I mean…WTF? None of us
    was expecting anything like THIS.
    Good lord.

    It;s not the same team, anywhere down the line, with both DEs being mostly silent.

    Plus. Bad tackling showed up again on D.

    Plus. The penalties and horribly timed mistakes showed up again on O. Negating 1st downs and one TD.

    Plus. Foles was a mess. He’s not the least bit confident right now. He’s not the guy we saw in the Seattle game.

    Plus. Hekker blew a fake. In Rams territory.

    Everything that could go wrong, did.

    Well the Bears were missing their top RB
    and Alshon was hobbled and they were
    on the road, etc.

    Apparently, the bears were still able
    to avoid stupid penalties and tackle
    ball-carriers, etc.

    I’m as mad as hell and I’m not taking
    it anymore….I’m just gonna go
    to the Window, open it, stick my
    head out and say….um..
    ..Shit! Go Rams!

    w
    v

    #34180
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    man rams played like a mound of manure.

    the only thing i can take away as a positive is the rams d in the second half.

    two blown plays on defense in the first half lead to 80 yd tds. penalties against the defense led to a td when it should have been a fg. that’s 21 points right there. they did hold the bears to a fg after mason’s fumble.

    offense was horrendous. foles constantly late throwing it to receivers who were open allowing defenders to break up the passes. he played like crap. don’t think it’s a confidence issue. he might just be a really bad qb. we’ll see.

    robinson and penalties killed so many drives. not just him though he was the main culprit. off the top of my head barnes and kendricks had false starts.

    this team beat itself. pathetic.

    #34190
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Well the Bears were missing their top RB
    and Alshon was hobbled and they were
    on the road, etc.

    That’s nothing. This entire team depends on its DL to win and it got negated… the DEs were contained and silent.

    The equivalent would be if the Rams D completed stifled Cutler to the point where he could do nothing, like Manning today.

    Just lists of injuries doesn’t give you honest equivalence. As they stand right now as a team, negate the Rams DL and the Rams as a whole aren’t competitive.

    ….

    #34194
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams disappear in blowout loss to Bears

    Jim Thomas

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/rams-disappear-in-blowout-loss-to-bears/article_2b88bab5-6615-5739-8b6f-f65b0bddb888.html

    So here they are, your St. Louis Rams, once again in an all-too-familiar position. After building up hopes like never before under Jeff Fisher that this would be the year they get over the hump, the Rams served up yet another bitter pill to their faithful Sunday at the Edward Jones Dome.

    In one of their worst outings of the Fisher tenure in St. Louis, the Rams were embarrassed 37-13 by a 4-5 Chicago team that was missing star running back Matt Forte and its best defensive player, outside linebacker Pernell McPhee.

    Off-balance all day, the Rams defense gave up a pair of 80 yards-plus touchdowns in the first half, falling behind 24-10 at halftime.

    So after creeping above .500 in November for the first time since 2006, the Rams now stand at 4-5 after back-to-back losses with road games at Baltimore and Cincinnati the next two Sundays.

    “We got outplayed and out-coached,” Fisher said. “Two big plays (allowed) on defense were kind of back breakers.”

    Nick Foles’ struggles continued at quarterback. He completed fewer than .50 percent of his passes (17 of 36), threw a late interception, and was high or late with several throws. He missed two wide-open receivers in the end zone for what should’ve been touchdowns.

    Foles has thrown only one touchdown pass in his past four games and hasn’t thrown for more than 200 yards in a game since Week 1.

    “Not good enough to win,” Foles said when asked to evaluate his play. “We’re not winning, so I’ve gotta keep working to get better, working to make sure offensively we get rolling.”

    Backup Case Keenum finished out the game at quarterback, and Fisher didn’t issue an impassioned defense of Foles when asked if he would consider a quarterback change going forward.

    “We’ll look at it, but at this point, no,” Fisher said.

    You’d think the Rams would be well beyond a game like this under Fisher, but not so.

    “I don’t like it,” Fisher said. “With four minutes to go in the game, we had eight first downs. You can’t win games like that.”

    SALUTE TO SERVICE

    The Rams teamed with Boeing to provide 1,000 tickets to the USO of Missouri for military members and their families for Sunday’s Salute to Service game.

    U.S. Army war hero Daniel Rodriguez, a wide receiver who walked on at Clemson and who was in training camp with the Rams this year, will return to serve as an honorary team captain for Sunday’s game.

    Rodriguez, 27, earned a Bronze Star and Purple Heart for his heroism in the Battle of Kamdesh in Afghanistan in October 2009. He was signed by the Rams after a tryout.

    In the preseason, the 5-foot-8, 180-pounder caught two passes for 10 yards. He also averaged 23.7 yards on seven kickoff returns and 4.8 yards on six punt returns.

    DOME UPGRADE

    The concrete that surrounded the playing surface at the Edward Jones Dome has been covered by blue rubber padding that should help players maintain their footing. In each of the last two games at the Dome, players _ Cleveland QB Josh McCown and San Francisco RB Reggie Bush _ suffered injuries after falls resulting from losing their footing as they ran from the turf onto the concrete.

    #34207
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Ten Takeaways from the Rams’ 37-13 Loss to the Bears

    Randy Karraker

    http://www.101sports.com/2015/11/15/ten-takeaways-from-the-rams-37-13-loss-to-the-bears/

    When a first year coach of a team that was 5-11 last year takes his team on the road to face a fourth year coach of a team that’s supposed to be ascending, and his team drills the opponent…that should be bad news for the fourth year coach.
    jeff fisher-10

    The last NFL coach to make it to a fifth season without making the playoffs was Gary Kubiak of the Texans, who started in 2006 and didn’t make the playoffs until 2011.

    It looks like Jeff Fisher is on a similar path.

    The lack of consistency on the part of the Rams is troubling, and the fact that they are two games behind the last wild card team in the conference pretty much eliminates them from the playoffs. The last two games were not only winnable for the Rams, but the home game against Chicago was a must win, and they got hammered 37-13.

    And with that, ten takeaways…

    1) The Rams got off to a terrific start on offense, driving eighty yards in seven plays (11.4 per play) to a touchdown that put them ahead 7-0. After that opening drive, the Rams ran 25 plays the remainder of the first half, and picked up 66 yards. In the second half, they gained 139 yards on 29 plays. Breaking it down, the Rams amassed just 205 yards after their opening drive, averaging 3.8 yards per play.

    2) The Rams defense was killed by big plays, which is awfully unusual for them. Before Sunday, the only play over fifty yards the Rams had allowed was a 65 yard pass from Aaron Rodgers to James Jones. The second biggest play was a 39 yard run by Matt Jones of Washington. The 87 and 83 yard touchdown passes by Jay Cutler to Zach Miller and Jeremy Langford, respectively, were more than enough to get the defense on its heels, and it never recovered.

    3) We wondered during the pregame show if the absence of Matt Forte might cause the Rams to concentrate too much on Alshon Jeffery and Martellus Bennett, the two biggest remaining playmakers for Chicago. Sure enough, Jeffery was held to 23 yards on three catches, and Bennett had three grabs for eighteen yards. The Rams covered those guys, but saw their stout run defense disintegrate, allowing 153 yards on 37 carries. In week nine of year four, more is expected of a defense working against Jeremy Langford and Kadeem Carey.

    4) Meanwhile, the Rams running game has fallen back to its old ways. Running backs had eighteen carries for 76 yards, but before a garbage time drive that featured Trey Mason, they had thirteen carries for 48 yards. The running game certainly wasn’t up to winning NFL standards. Teams are stacking the box against Todd Gurley and daring the Rams to throw, and the Rams simply aren’t efficient enough in the passing game to make them pay.
    nick foles-8

    Foles was 17 of 36 for 200 yards with a QB rating of 53.0 in Sunday’s Rams loss.

    5) The Rams coaching staff hasn’t adapted to Nick Foles’ limitations. Of course, one of those limitations is the talent level of his recievers, and there’s nothing anyone can do about that.

    But Foles also has real trouble throwing effectively outside the numbers, and the Rams continue to try plays on the perimeter.

    They MUST work inside the numbers if they’re going to have success, because he simply can’t make the intermediate-to-long throw on the sideline.

    6) At this stage of the game, it’s more than fair to question whether or not Fisher is up to the job of winning a championship, which should be the ultimate goal of any franchise. His Rams record now is 24-32-1. He has his coaching staff and his players. Any suggestion of injuries being an excuse are diminished by the fact that he’s has four years to build the roster and the depth is his.

    On Sunday, Fisher had his hand-picked quarterback, running back, receivers, tight ends, tackles, center, one guard, defensive tackles, one end, two linebackers and secondary. No excuses. In game nine of year four, there is no excuse to lose this game. Try to think of a circumstance under which Fisher would lead the Rams to a championship. I can’t.

    7) Left tackle Greg Robinson is playing far from the quality of a 2nd pick in the draft. After committing three holding penalties, Robinson leads all NFL offensive players in penalties with nine, an average of one per game, and is tied with Jason Kelce of Philadelphia with eight offensive holding penalties. He had two more holding penalties against Cleveland that were declined.

    On Sunday, one of his holds nullified a Tavon Austin touchdown that would have made the score 14-7 Rams, but instead they kicked a field goal. That was a devastating penalty. Another third quarter hold nullified an Austin catch that would have provided a first down at the Bears’ 40. The second tackle taken in the 2014 draft, Jake Matthews of Atlanta, has committed three penalties, two of which were holding, and has been a much more effective pass blocker than Robinson. Robinson is still very young, but the lack of progress is alarming.

    8) On the bright side for Stan Kroenke, with dynamic pricing for the Bears game, the Rams distributed more than 60,000 tickets and collected more revenue for a home game than they ever have. The Rams were able to get more people into the building than for any game this season, and collect the biggest gate ever. And almost half the crowd went home happy.

    9) Down 27-13 early in the fourth quarter, the Rams tried a fake punt deep in their own territory, and Johnny Hekker’s pass fell incomplete. While Jeff Fisher was asked about it after the game, it was a non-factor. The Bears kicked a field goal after the failed attempt, and the Rams offense wasn’t going to produce two touchdowns anyway. The failed fake was a non-factor in the defeat. By that time, the game had been decided.

    10) Foles is 28th in passer rating and 28th in yards in the NFL. His play simply isn’t up to a level that’s going to help a team win, let alone make a team win. His 186.4 yards per game are 34th in the league, and as Kevin Wheeler mentioned in the postgame show on 101 ESPN, three of the seven touchdown passes he’s thrown in nine games came in one game, at Arizona. He needs to have more good games if the Rams are to have ANY chance to win.

    Next week the Rams are at Baltimore. Since they’ve lost two in a row and aren’t in a position to put anything positive together, they have a shot against the Ravens. But in terms of having a playoff shot in 2015, that likely went by the boards with the blowout loss to the Bears on Sunday.[/quote]

    #34220
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams once again fail to sustain drives in loss to Bears

    Nick Wagoner

    http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/23724/rams-once-again-fail-to-sustain-drives-in-loss-to-bears

    EARTH CITY, Mo. — Looking back at three things to watch in the St. Louis Rams’ 37-13 loss to the Chicago Bears on Sunday:

    1. Possession priority: The Bears’ formula when they’ve had success this season has been pretty simple: control the ball and the clock and keep the defense on the sideline. Entering Sunday’s game, Chicago was fourth in the NFL in time of possession. Offensive coordinator Adam Gase has installed a system that allows quarterback Jay Cutler to take care of the ball, make plays when the opportunity arises and keep the Bears offense on the field.

    The Rams, meanwhile, entered Sunday’s game near the bottom of the league in time of possession and first downs. It figured to be a dangerous mix if the Rams couldn’t find ways to stay on the field offensively.

    As it turned out, that’s exactly what happened. Gase called a nearly perfect game and had the Rams defense completely off balance with a mix of quick passes and power runs. When it was all said and done, the Bears had the ball for 34:22 to the Rams’ 25:38. Chicago also had 17 first downs to the Rams’ 12. While the Bears also hit a couple of big plays, consider those just a bonus to a game plan that was perfectly executed. Given the time of possession disparity, the result of the game should be no surprise.

    2. Whither Welker: As expected, Welker was active and involved on third downs less than a week after signing with the Rams. Quarterback Nick Foles targeted Welker quickly though he overthrew him on his first target. All told, Welker played just 11 snaps, most of those coming on third down and was targeted six times. He finished with three catches for 32 yards with a long gain of 14 yards.

    Moving forward, Welker figures to be more involved in the offense as he takes on more of the playbook.

    3. Holding their water: In the previous three weeks before Sunday’s game, the Rams were flagged for offside penalties a whopping 12 times, including five against Cleveland three weeks ago and five more last week against Minnesota. Those flags have given opponents first downs, made getting another first down more manageable and many times altered field position in a significant way.

    It was a point of emphasis during the week for those numbers to decrease and it was one of the rare times the Rams actually followed through on it. They picked up just one penalty for jumping offside and it didn’t happen when the Rams were on defense. Safety Rodney McLeod jumped on an extra point attempt but otherwise the Rams were able to get the issue corrected for at least one week. It was actually one of the few things the Rams did well in an embarrassing loss.

    #34225
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Gordo: Rams’ giant step backward difficult to explain

    Jeff Gordon

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/columns/jeff-gordon/gordo-rams-giant-step-backward-difficult-to-explain/article_906e7d16-312c-5856-a5ad-b3b35cb0023b.html

    For the first 2 minutes 59 seconds of clock time Sunday, the Rams looked playoff-ready.

    They seemed prepared to beat the Chicago Bears, set aside last Sunday’s painful overtime loss at Minnesota, move back over .500 and climb into the NFC postseason picture.

    “Everybody had an agreement that this was the start of the season, this was our chance to put our stamp on the season,” tight end Jared Cook said. “We’re at the halfway mark and it’s time to become a new team, it’s time to become a better team.”

    They appeared energized by the large Edward Jones Dome turnout (58,653 tickets distributed, many to visiting Sons of Ditka). The stage seemed set for a huge victory, especially after the Rams raced to a quick 7-0 lead with a crisp first drive.

    Instead, they reverted back to the same old Rams during a crushing 37-13 loss.

    “We got outplayed, got outcoached,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said. “We didn’t play well.”

    That summed it up nicely in 10 words or less. This loss offered nightmarish flashbacks to Fisher’s previous seasons here. Errant passes, dropped passes, drive-killing offensive penalties and massive defensive breakdowns led the Rams down a familiar trail.

    “It hurt,” defensive tackle Michael Brockers said. “Nobody likes to lose, especially this way and at home. It hurts.”

    The game started with such promise. Quarterback Nick Foles opened the first series by rolling out on a misdirection passing play and hitting Cook, who rambled 29 yards.

    One play later, running back Todd Gurley caught a pass from Foles and hurdled a defender on a spectacular 31-yard play. Then Gurley plowed through the Bears for 14 yards on two runs to advance the ball to the Chicago 6.

    One player later, Gurley crashed into the end zone and the Rams led. Finally their offensive play script produced early results in a game.

    “We came out, first drive, went down the field,” Cook said. “After that, it was just downhill, man. I don’t know. We’ve got to figure it out.”

    Yes, they do. Gurley is a great running back, but defenses are sitting on him. He gained just 45 yards on 12 carries Sunday. And once the Rams fell behind the Bears by multiple scores, they had to abandon the run.

    Foles was just awful, sailing many of this throws beyond his targets as if the footballs were filled with helium. He short-armed some other throws while restless Rams fans booed. He finished 17 for 36 for 200 yards, no touchdowns and one interception.

    “I feel good,” Foles insisted after the game. “I feel good dropping back, throwing, reading defenses — I feel good about it.”

    That makes one person who feels good about it. What happened to the Nick Foles who posted a 115.8 passer rating against Seattle and a 126.9 rating at Arizona?

    Can somebody get THAT guy out to Rams Park on Monday?

    “He’s a confident, competitive person,” Fisher said. “He thought, with seven minutes to go in the game, we were going to put two drives together and score.”

    Again, that makes one person who believed. Foles seemed totally out of sorts, often throwing late and without much conviction. Fisher waved off questions about a quarterback change during his postgame media sessions, but those questions won’t go away.

    Off course, Foles wasn’t the only offensive problem. Running back Tre Mason fumbled the ball away on his first carry. Receiver Tavon Austin dropped a potential third-down conversion pass over the middle. The mistakes just kept coming.

    Second-year left tackle Greg Robinson earned three costly holding penalties, including one that erased an Austin touchdown run. Robinson is well into the second year of his NFL career and remains mistake-prone.

    If he were a sixth-round pick, that might be understandable. But Robinson went second overall in the 2014 draft and he hasn’t come close to living up to that standard.

    The offensive line took another big injury hit when rookie right guard Jamon Brown suffered a broken lower leg while trying to thwart an interception return. Also, rookie right tackle Rob Havenstein suffered a calf muscle strain in the game.

    With veteran guard Rodger Saffold done for the season after shoulder surgery, the front wall will have a makeshift look going forward. That could make a sputtering offense even more inconsistent.

    Like many, Cook is baffled by that offensive failure.

    “When we have a good defense like we’ve got, man, there should be no reason why we shouldn’t be able to put up at least 20 to 24 points per game to keep us in the game,” Cook said. “Most of the time we haven’t been able to do that.”

    Until this week the Rams defense has held up pretty well despite that lack of offensive support. But Sunday it suffered the sort of major mishaps that doomed previous Fisher teams.

    This game turned when Bears quarterback Jay Cutler countered a Rams blitz with a quick pass to tight end Zach Miller, who cut back and raced 87 yards for the game-tying touchdown play.

    Later, a simple screen pass sucked in the Rams and led to an 83-yard TD bolt for running back Jeremy Langford.

    “We’re a good tackling defense but for whatever reason today, that didn’t show up,” middle linebacker James Laurinaitis said.

    So much for the notion of starting a new and better season.

    “Everybody still believes that,” Cook said. “I’m not going to say it’s panic time, but it’s time to come and get this train rolling.”

    #34230
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Okay, I’ve read a ton of Robinson-bashing for the holding calls.

    I didn’t see the first one, but the second one looked completely bogus to me, and the third one was pretty freaking marginal. That third one gets overlooked more often than it is called, imo. It was one of those nanosecond deals that didn’t even affect the play.

    #34234
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    Okay, I’ve read a ton of Robinson-bashing for the holding calls.

    I didn’t see the first one, but the second one looked completely bogus to me, and the third one was pretty freaking marginal. That third one gets overlooked more often than it is called, imo. It was one of those nanosecond deals that didn’t even affect the play.

    i agree to a certain extent. but now the refs are watching him. and he’s got to be sure and be perfect. were they ticky tack fouls? yeah. but he’s gotta know now that they’re watching him. i think he got careless and sloppy. but again. i’m giving him until the end of next year. most guys maybe this is the year. but given how raw he is i’m waiting until year 3.

    #34406
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    PFF:

    CHI-STL GRADES: BEARS’ DEFENSE STUMPS RAMS

    The top takeaways and highest-graded players from the Bears’ 37-13 win over the Rams.

    MICHAEL MOUNTFORD

    https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2015/11/16/chi-stl-grades-bears-defense-stumps-rams/

    Here are the top takeaways and highest-graded players from the Bears’ 37-13 win over the Rams:

    Chicago Bears
    – Jay Cutler (-1.7) had his lowest grade of the season, but was very effective on passes under 10 yards, going 19-for-20 for 258 yards and all three TDs. However, most of these were passes short of the sticks that the receivers did all of the work. Zach Miller going 87 yards for a touchdown was more about the Rams’ defense than anything Cutler did; he threw a short speed out, and Miller made one cut and the Rams defense overran the pursuit angle. Cutler was unable to complete a pass over 10 yards, as 209 yards came after the catch.

    – The Bears’ secondary performed at a high level versus the Rams; CB Kyle Fuller (+3.3) came away with the highest grade on the team, as he allowed just one catch on eight targets for 1 yard and had one pass deflection. On the opposite side of him was Tracy Porter (+2.5); while Porter was only targeted three times, he too only allowed one catch for a grand total of 6 yards and had two pass deflections. Both starting safeties, Antrel Rolle (+2.3) and Adrian Amos (+0.5) also held up in coverage, only giving up three catches on six targets for 12 yards combined. The longest play the starting secondary gave up was two 6 yard pass plays.

    – With Matt Forte out, neither Jeremy Langford (+1.8) nor Ka’Deem Carey (RB -0.7) did much as a runner versus the Rams; part of the problem was that the Rams’ defensive line gave the Bears’ running backs very little room to work with. Langford was able to escape on a couple of runs, however, these were few and far between. As a receiver out of the backfield, Langford was able to take a screen pass 83 yards for a touchdown.

    Top Performers:

    CB Kyle Fuller (+3.3)
    TE Zach Miller (+3.0)
    LB Willie Young (+2.8)
    CB Tracy Porter (+2.7)
    S Antrel Rolle (+2.3)

    St. Louis Rams
    – Nick Foles (-5.0) struggled against the Bears’ defense, only completing 47 percent of his passes; all of his completions were under 10 yards (there wasn’t a single completed pass over 10 yards in this whole game). When Foles tried to go over 10 yards, he was 0-for-14. With the Rams struggling to move the ball in the run game, St. Louis tried to open the Bears’ defense downfield, but neither Foles nor the receivers had any luck in getting a chunk of yardage on one play.

    – Second-year pro Aaron Donald (+11.7) had another one of his monster games. Donald had the second-highest pass rushing productivity of the week for defensive tackles at 18.4, thanks to four total pressures on 19 pass rushing snaps. While Donald only had three run stops on 30 snaps, he caused the Bears’ interior offensive line issues all game long with both his ability to penetrate into the backfield as well as using his strength to stand up the lineman at the point of attack, taking away the holes for the Bears’ runners that way.

    – First round pick Todd Gurley (-0.7) struggled to find any room as a runner, as the Bears’ defense committed to stopping Gurley first and forcing the Rams into long passing situations. They did so with great effect, allowing Gurley just 45 yards on 12 carries. The longest run allowed by Gurley all night was just 9 yards. The past two weeks for Gurley have been a realization that the NFL is not the SEC, and those first four starts where he gained 100+ yards each week will not continue with the NFL defenses focusing more and more on the run game.

    Top Performers:

    DL Aaron Donald (+11.7)
    OL Garrett Reynolds (+3.7)
    DL Nick Fairley (+3.4)
    OL Rob Havenstein (+2.4)
    CB Janoris Jenkins (+2.1)

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