Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › praise for Stafford after TNF (definitive article posted 1/9)
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December 14, 2023 at 9:55 pm #147533znModerator
‘He’s played like Matthew’: Stafford returning to form at right time for Rams
Stu Jackson
https://www.therams.com/news/matthew-stafford-returning-to-form-at-right-time-for-rams
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. – In the thick of a playoff push, the Rams are getting their starting quarterback’s best.
Matthew Stafford has thrown 11 touchdowns to 2 interceptions across the last four games, two of which were against the top two defenses in the NFL, and helped the Rams go 3-1 during that stretch as they head into Sunday’s Week 15 home game against the Commanders (1:05 p.m. PT, CBS).
“Yeah, he’s played like Matthew,” Rams head coach Sean McVay said this week. “He’s a great player and you can see he’s feeling healthy. I think he’s doing a great job of distributing the football. Guys are competing hard around him and for him and he has got great command of what he’s seeing. These have definitely been two of the upper echelon defenses. I think he’s played really well when you look at the fourth quarter in Seattle and then the last 12 quarters when you combine Arizona, Cleveland, and yesterday against Baltimore. He’s given us a chance to play really well on the offensive side of the football and when he’s doing that good things happen.”
In addition to that touchdown to interception ratio, Stafford has completed 61.3 percent of his pass attempts for 992 yards since the bye week. Reduce that stretch to the last three games, and he leads the NFL in passing touchdowns (10) and is sixth in passing yards (802).
Health is part of that, but so too is the play of the 10 offensive teammates around him on the field.
Of note, the offensive line has allowed just three sacks in the last four games: Two against the Ravens and one against the Seahawks. Stafford was not sacked once against the Cardinals or Browns.
“I’m always trying to improve, trying to get better week-to-week, and like I said earlier, each game is unique, right?” Stafford said. “What’s asked of me? What is my job for that week? It’s always to go out there and play at a high level, but sometimes that looks different. So just proud of the guys. If I’m playing well, that means the guys in front of me are blocking. The guys on the outside are getting open and catching it. We’re running the ball efficiently. It’s an unbelievable team sport. It takes everybody to do all of it. I’m just trying to make sure that when everything is right around me and my number is called to go out there and do my job as best I possibly can and knowing that the guys around me are all fighting to do the exact same thing just working towards one mission and that’s trying to win the game.”
While Stafford minimizes his role in that success and defers credit to his teammates, those teammates still recognize the work he’s putting in to put himself in a position to succeed.
“Oh, man, (he’s playing) tremendously,” wide receiver Demarcus Robinson said. “He’s playing outstanding right now. He’s his own guy. He comes in, he studies, works hard, never gives up on us, never takes days off. He’s another guy just like us in the locker room trying to win the day every day. And he’s a great communicator, a great leader. He’s top-tier in my book, for sure.”
One highlight that has been present during this four-game stretch that was also there before it: The jaw-dropping throws Stafford continues to make. It’s something Kupp pointed out, in addition to the aforementioned command that has the Rams’ offense clicking.
That leadership, above all else, is perhaps the biggest key to the way the last four weeks have gone for Stafford and the Rams.
“What he’ll do is he’ll stand in the pocket and manipulate his arm angles and make some throws in there that’s just like, ‘Gosh dang, I can’t believe that you made this throw,'” Kupp said. “You might not see it on ESPN next night, but we see it. Aside from even that stuff, I think the way he’s managing games, being in the huddle, the leadership that he’s shown, the ownership of the offense, the understanding of being able to just communicate clearly to the rest of us so we can play free and not have to worry about what we’re doing and things like that. He takes a lot on himself to take the load off a lot of people, and it’s a pretty special thing for a quarterback the way that he handles that. No one else is going to know that, but he does a big part of that for everyone.”
- This topic was modified 1 year ago by zn.
December 15, 2023 at 1:46 pm #147545ZooeyModerator‘Gosh dang, I can’t believe that you made this throw,’” Kupp said.
Wow, I had no idea that Kupp has such a potty mouth.
December 15, 2023 at 5:19 pm #147549wvParticipant“What he’ll do is he’ll stand in the pocket and manipulate his arm angles and make some throws in there that’s just like, ‘Gosh dang, I can’t believe that you made this throw,’” Kupp said. “You might not see it on ESPN next night, but we see it. Aside from even that stuff, I think the way he’s managing games…”
Gosh dang it, Stafford is the Rams’ MVP.
And this is a team with Aaron Donald.
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December 15, 2023 at 11:44 pm #147554canadaramParticipant‘Gosh dang, I can’t believe that you made this throw,’” Kupp said.
Wow, I had no idea that Kupp has such a potty mouth.
That made me laugh.
December 16, 2023 at 1:05 am #147555znModeratorNFL Rumors@nflrumsLos Angeles Rams Matthew Stafford NFL Stats in his last 3 games:• 63.1 Comp %• 802 Passing yards• 10 TD 1 INT• 111.0 Passer ratingDecember 22, 2023 at 11:39 am #147806ZooeyModerator.@RamsNFL Stafford keeping the play alive. DRob been a great addition to the offense in last month. #BaldysBreakdowns pic.twitter.com/LJpNAqCGPq
— Brian Baldinger (@BaldyNFL) December 22, 2023
This side-armed pass, rolling left and throwing against the grain is as good a pass as you will ever see. Stafford made at least 2 other precision throws to Robinson, the one down the left sideline, and the TD pass. He also nailed Nacua on the opening play of the second half. He gets the velocity right. He gets the angle right. He puts the ball exactly where it needs to be. He makes throws before the WR even breaks. He improvises well. He makes multiple reads.
Stafford does this every week. He makes it look easy. He is one of the all-time elite QBs. There are QBs that have thrown as well as Stafford, but nobody can throw it any better. If he can get one more Lombardi before he retires, he is a first ballot HOF.
December 23, 2023 at 12:22 am #147848znModeratorMatthew Stafford’s thumbprints are all over Rams’ resurgence and win over Saints
Sam Farmer
Matthew Stafford wasn’t a quarterback on this play but a receiver.
He stood in the Rams locker room in the immediate aftermath of a 30-22 victory over the New Orleans Saints, and coach Sean McVay, hoarse and striding back and forth, tossed game balls to the most impactful players.
Finally, the coach held a ball high over his head and announced: “Wouldn’t want anyone else in the world leading us,” and flipped an underhand pass to Stafford as the team erupted.
With 14 touchdowns and one interception in the last five games, Stafford looks so relaxed and precise in finding his targets, he might as well have a dart in one hand and a pint in the other.
“Just the throws he makes, we’re just on the sideline like, ‘How did he do it?’ ” Rams safety John Johnson III said. “With a flick of the wrist, he makes it look effortless. You give him time back there, he’ll dot up any team in the league.”
The Saints came into the game with a good pass defense and more breakups than any team in the NFL. Of course, the best quarterbacks they had faced to this point were Trevor Lawrence and Jared Goff. Those guys are good, but Stafford is at a different level.
“People don’t understand how much he was pushing through with the thumb,” McVay said, referring to the injury on Stafford’s throwing hand that sidelined him for 1½ games. “But this guy is a stud. He elevates everybody, myself included. He’s playing outstanding.”
With two games remaining and the playoffs within reach, the Rams need sturdy performances from Stafford at the New York Giants and at San Francisco to tighten their grip on an NFC wild-card berth.
Amazing how far this team has come. It was only a few months ago that outsiders were speculating that, in this rebuilding year, the Rams should just tank the season so they could draft USC quarterback Caleb Williams.
Now, McVay has assembled a remarkable coaching season, and Stafford has forced his way into the most-valuable-player conversation, though quarterbacks Brock Purdy, Dak Prescott and Lamar Jackson also have made compelling cases.
Remember the kerfuffle at the beginning of the season when people wondered if the 35-year-old Stafford might have problems relating to his younger teammates? His wife raised the topic on her podcast, and the quarterback laughed it off.
That certainly hasn’t been a problem. The Rams are among the youngest teams in the league, and two of their most impactful offensive contributors are rookie receiver Puka Nacua and second-year running back Kyren Williams. Stafford looks as if he’s been playing with them for years.
“He’s raising these youngsters up,” said Stafford’s former left tackle, Andrew Whitworth, who was at Thursday night’s game in his new role as an Amazon Prime color analyst.
“I actually sent him a text at about midseason. I was here for a game, and I knew a play didn’t go the way it was supposed to, and I saw him come on the sideline and saw how angry he was. Instead of lashing out, there was this moment where he sat down for a second and you could see his body language. He took a deep breath, set his helmet down and he walked over and put his arm around the kid and was gentle.
“When I see Matthew right now, I think he’s having the most fun being the big brother. He’s kind of the steady guy that they can all lean on for a million different reasons. And in the games, he gets to watch their energy and passion, and he gets to feed off of that.”
A video went viral last week of Stafford and his wife, Kelly, posing for a photo with their four young daughters, and the quarterback answered a question about that after Thursday’s game.
The youngest of the girls advised the quarterback: “Daddy, have a good game. Don’t get tackled.”
“It’s a special time in my life,” he said. “To be able to do what I get to do still, play at a high level and have them understand what’s going on and to watch and cheer. Obviously, my youngest is pretty dialed in, telling me not to get hit — she’s a smart girl.
“I love getting to see them before games down on the sideline and then wave to them after we play. It’s a whole lot of fun.”
It’s clear that Stafford is enjoying himself, with a chance to extend the type of season few people envisioned. Sure, he’s in the back half of his career, but his play lately has been ageless.
December 23, 2023 at 12:36 am #147852znModeratorMatthew Stafford has 4 games with a 90+ PFF grade this season.
Only Dak Prescott has more among QBs 👀 pic.twitter.com/lC59tZaGIl
— PFF (@PFF) December 22, 2023
December 23, 2023 at 12:41 am #147854znModeratorMatthew Stafford’s last 5 games:
🐏 1,388 passing yards
🐏 14 passing touchdowns
🐏 1 interception
🐏 114.6 passer ratingThe @RamsNFL QB is balling. pic.twitter.com/Y8RdJG7CLg
— NFL on Prime Video (@NFLonPrime) December 22, 2023
December 26, 2023 at 7:04 am #147939znModeratorDecember 26, 2023 at 9:09 am #147942znModeratorSpencer Schultz@ravens4dummiesStafford, Allen and Jackson are the three best QB’s in football this year. Rams are a tough out because Stafford is so on time it’s like there’s almost not a defense on the field.December 27, 2023 at 12:36 am #147982znModeratorThe highest-graded QBs from Week 16 🎯 pic.twitter.com/tzfZDKsiID
— PFF (@PFF) December 26, 2023
December 28, 2023 at 10:33 am #148016znModeratorfrom PFF: https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-los-angeles-rams-team-that-nobody-wants-to-play-playoffs-2023
Matthew Stafford leads the league in big-time throw rate (6.4%), and he has the lowest turnover-worthy play rate in the league at the same time (1.6%). Earlier in the year, the box-score numbers weren’t reflecting that play, but he has now thrown multiple touchdowns in five consecutive games, with just one interception opposite 14 touchdowns.
December 28, 2023 at 11:17 am #148019wvParticipantIf you look at that list of QBs on that chart, there isnt a lot of separation among them. Doesnt look like one of those years, where one QB (Brady) is lightyears ahead of the others. They are kinda bunched up. The pundits have been yak-ing about Dak all year, but his numbers arent much different from Staffords.
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December 28, 2023 at 4:50 pm #148028wvParticipantChris Long mentions the ‘drives’. He’s right to talk about them. You just have to see them.
December 28, 2023 at 7:26 pm #148031InvaderRamModeratorChris Long mentions the ‘drives’. He’s right to talk about them. You just have to see them.
i disagree slightly. if this offense loses kyren, they will look very pedestrian. gurley. he’s more explosive. he jumps out at you in a way kyren never will. but he’s just as important. the offense will sorely miss him if he can’t play.
December 29, 2023 at 8:19 pm #148055znModeratorMatthew Stafford on 3rd/4th downs this season:
🔵 91.1 PFF grade (1st)
🟡 12 passing TDs
🔵 1 INT
🟡 112.8 passer rating (1st) pic.twitter.com/Vr6pIJCeUi— PFF (@PFF) December 29, 2023
December 29, 2023 at 8:51 pm #148060znModeratorroberto clemente@rclemente2121
just thinking out loud….stafford’s last 5 games:
qb ratings
———–
120.7
118.0
103.1
110.1
121.1and
—–
> 4-1 record
> 14 tds, 1 int
> led offense to 31.6 offensive pts / gm avg
> hung 34 on the browns, 29 on the ravensDecember 29, 2023 at 9:16 pm #148061znModeratorMatthew Stafford on 3rd/4th downs this season:
91.1 PFF grade (1st)
12 passing TDs
1 INT
112.8 passer rating (1st)3rd down conversion percentage, team (I can’t find individual qb 3rd down stats)
Rams: ranked 12th
Last 3 games, ranked 9th
December 30, 2023 at 10:36 am #148066ZooeyModeratorroberto clemente@rclemente2121 just thinking out loud…. stafford’s last 5 games: qb ratings ———– 120.7 118.0 103.1 110.1 121.1 and —– > 4-1 record > 14 tds, 1 int > led offense to 31.6 offensive pts / gm avg > hung 34 on the browns, 29 on the ravens
It just makes you wonder what Stafford could be doing if he wasn’t washed up.
December 30, 2023 at 11:28 am #148068znModeratorIt just makes you wonder what Stafford could be doing if he wasn’t washed up
Plus if he were really any good, why didn’t he win any playoff games in Detroit.
December 30, 2023 at 4:55 pm #148073wvParticipantThe marriage of McVay and Stafford is so effective. I dont think it can ever by over-stated just how great it must be for McVay to have a veteran with as much mental-power and experience as Matthew Stafford. Now that Brady has retired, who is the top QB-brain active on the grid-iron? If it aint Stafford, I dunno who it would be.
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December 31, 2023 at 12:31 pm #148091ZooeyModeratorThe marriage of McVay and Stafford is so effective. I dont think it can ever by over-stated just how great it must be for McVay to have a veteran with as much mental-power and experience as Matthew Stafford. Now that Brady has retired, who is the top QB-brain active on the grid-iron? If it aint Stafford, I dunno who it would be. w v
I am stunned by how good Matthew Stafford is. More so this season than the SB season. He was good that year, but good lord almighty.
That “No Look” throw in the Super Bowl was Something Else. It was not just a “cool throw.” There is a good chance that that pass would not have been completed, if it weren’t for the fact that it was a No Look pass. That LB was right there. He was smack in the sweet spot of that passing lane. And Stafford’s “misdirection gaze” made that dude lean slightly to his left, and by the time he saw where the ball was going, he just couldn’t quite reverse his momentum enough to get his fingertips on that pass, and that was a HUGE play.
But now it seems like I see that freakshit from Stafford every single fucking game. The stakes aren’t as high, so maybe if we are judging passes like a Diving judge, and taking context into account, the Super Bowl pass was the highwater mark. But this year, it’s like he is making those throws without anybody paying much attention to it. He is doing it all the time. Roll to the left, throw cross-body to the right, splitting the legs of a LB, and darting the ball between 2 guys in the secondary who stretch out within 6 inches of the ball, right into the hands of some goddamn receiver nobody heard of before this year. With broken bones and probably a collapsed lung. It’s ridiculous. I am beginning to realize that I am deeply in love with Matthew Stafford.
I’m going to say it right now: I think he’s better than Pat Haden was.
December 31, 2023 at 4:16 pm #148096znModeratorThe marriage of McVay and Stafford is so effective. I dont think it can ever by over-stated just how great it must be for McVay to have a veteran with as much mental-power and experience as Matthew Stafford. Now that Brady has retired, who is the top QB-brain active on the grid-iron? If it aint Stafford, I dunno who it would be. w v
I am stunned by how good Matthew Stafford is. More so this season than the SB season. He was good that year, but good lord almighty. That “No Look” throw in the Super Bowl was Something Else. It was not just a “cool throw.” There is a good chance that that pass would not have been completed, if it weren’t for the fact that it was a No Look pass. That LB was right there. He was smack in the sweet spot of that passing lane. And Stafford’s “misdirection gaze” made that dude lean slightly to his left, and by the time he saw where the ball was going, he just couldn’t quite reverse his momentum enough to get his fingertips on that pass, and that was a HUGE play. But now it seems like I see that freakshit from Stafford every single fucking game. The stakes aren’t as high, so maybe if we are judging passes like a Diving judge, and taking context into account, the Super Bowl pass was the highwater mark. But this year, it’s like he is making those throws without anybody paying much attention to it. He is doing it all the time. Roll to the left, throw cross-body to the right, splitting the legs of a LB, and darting the ball between 2 guys in the secondary who stretch out within 6 inches of the ball, right into the hands of some goddamn receiver nobody heard of before this year. With broken bones and probably a collapsed lung. It’s ridiculous. I am beginning to realize that I am deeply in love with Matthew Stafford. I’m going to say it right now: I think he’s better than Pat Haden was.
December 31, 2023 at 4:16 pm #148097znModeratorThe marriage of McVay and Stafford is so effective. I dont think it can ever by over-stated just how great it must be for McVay to have a veteran with as much mental-power and experience as Matthew Stafford. Now that Brady has retired, who is the top QB-brain active on the grid-iron? If it aint Stafford, I dunno who it would be. w v
I am stunned by how good Matthew Stafford is. More so this season than the SB season. He was good that year, but good lord almighty. That “No Look” throw in the Super Bowl was Something Else. It was not just a “cool throw.” There is a good chance that that pass would not have been completed, if it weren’t for the fact that it was a No Look pass. That LB was right there. He was smack in the sweet spot of that passing lane. And Stafford’s “misdirection gaze” made that dude lean slightly to his left, and by the time he saw where the ball was going, he just couldn’t quite reverse his momentum enough to get his fingertips on that pass, and that was a HUGE play. But now it seems like I see that freakshit from Stafford every single fucking game. The stakes aren’t as high, so maybe if we are judging passes like a Diving judge, and taking context into account, the Super Bowl pass was the highwater mark. But this year, it’s like he is making those throws without anybody paying much attention to it. He is doing it all the time. Roll to the left, throw cross-body to the right, splitting the legs of a LB, and darting the ball between 2 guys in the secondary who stretch out within 6 inches of the ball, right into the hands of some goddamn receiver nobody heard of before this year. With broken bones and probably a collapsed lung. It’s ridiculous. I am beginning to realize that I am deeply in love with Matthew Stafford. I’m going to say it right now: I think he’s better than Pat Haden was.
January 6, 2024 at 2:19 am #148350znModeratorfrom NFL QB Index, Week 18: https://www.nfl.com/news/nfl-qb-index-week-18-2023-nfl-season.Rank 5.Los Angeles Rams · Year 15.
2023 stats: 15 games | 62.6 pct | 3,965 pass yds | 7.6 ypa | 24 pass TD | 11 INT | 65 rush yds | 0 rush TD | 0 fumbles
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Madden NFL players know the term well: Robo QB, a computer-controlled quarterback who seemingly knows what the defense is doing on every down and cannot miss, quickly firing dots all over the field. That’s what much of Stafford’s season has been like, and for a good portion of Week 17, he was a living, breathing Robo QB — except Robo QBs don’t miss throws in tight windows and end up tossing interceptions. Stafford’s two picks were startling solely because they were uncharacteristic of the quick-trigger, accurate passer he’s been for much of the season. But outside of the picks, Stafford was still very sharp, completing 24 of 34 passes for 317 yards and a touchdown. He’s largely been a lights-out passer for most of the year, and the only negative on his record is his stats aren’t as gaudy as others. No matter: Even with errors, Stafford is still propelling these Rams into the playoffs.
January 9, 2024 at 8:25 pm #148491znModeratorIf you haven't seen this yet, this is a good week to read @JourdanRodrigue on Matthew Stafford. https://t.co/UOSrX8EHUH
— Dan Pompei (@danpompei) January 9, 2024
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Matthew Stafford’s fingerprints, flair permeate revived Rams offense
Jourdan Rodrigue
https://theathletic.com/5173815/2024/01/04/matthew-stafford-rams-offense/
It was the early summer of 2021 in the dreamy haze of California’s central coast when Matthew Stafford understood for certain that Sean McVay was a little bit nuts.
“A lot nuts,” McVay recalled, grinning.
He, the head coach of the Los Angeles Rams, and Stafford, the quarterback for whom McVay had urged the team to trade a few months prior, met at a vineyard near Santa Barbara with their wives. “Had some wine, thought we were just gonna hang out,” Stafford said. “Then he pulls a piece of paper out.”
It was full of hand-drawn concepts outlining an idea McVay had about how to incorporate certain types of plays into an offense he, Stafford and then-offensive coordinator Kevin O’Connell were reimagining upon Stafford’s arrival in L.A. Stafford stared at the paper, and at McVay, for a moment. “Yeah, sure. I’ll learn it. Let’s go.”
“It’s good to be careful who you drink wine with,” Stafford added this December, laughing about the memory. The Rams ran that particular package of plays, he estimates, “like 75 times” in 2021 and Stafford threw for over 1,200 of his 4,886-yard total out of it. “We still use it,” McVay added, “we just dress it up differently now.”
Two years and a Super Bowl later, the coach and quarterback have re-invented the Rams’ offense a second time. Both of them needed to begin again: McVay’s offense lacked balance in an injury-laden 2022 and so did he. Stafford exited the season after just nine games after suffering a spinal cord contusion, watching from the sideline as the Rams imploded and speculation swirled about his possible retirement or even a trade.
In Stafford’s first season in L.A., McVay moved away from the Rams’ previous dependency on play-action and leaned on more of a dropback passing scheme. The 2023 version of the Rams’ offense blends both.
Where McVay historically deployed a predominantly zone running scheme — with smaller, quicker offensive linemen — the Rams are now a physical, gap-first rushing attack and use as much motion in their run game as they always have in the pass. The bulked-up offensive line has paved the way for lead rusher Kyren Williams and a newly efficient run game, and the blend between dropback concepts and play-action has helped protect Stafford. The Rams rank No. 7 in offensive EPA per play, which has helped turn the 5-12 disaster of 2022 into a 9-7 record and a playoff spot despite turning over two-thirds of the roster last spring.
The engine that makes the entire system go is Stafford, who at 35 is having an undeniably cool season. Simple statistics (24 touchdowns, 11 interceptions, 3,965 yards and a 62.6 completion percentage in 15 games) don’t really tell his story like his game film does. He is sixth among quarterbacks in EPA per dropback and tied for fourth in plays that go 20-plus yards. In December after returning from a sprained UCL in his right thumb that caused him to miss a game, Stafford went on a 170-throw streak before registering an interception (he had two in Week 17) and tossed a combined six touchdowns and 573 yards with no interceptions against the top defenses of Cleveland and Baltimore. This week, he was voted to the Pro Bowl.
“I don’t even think the stats do justice to what an impact he’s making on our team and that’s saying a lot because I know the stats are really impressive,” McVay said. “The level of play, the confidence that he breeds with everybody else, the command, the leadership, the things that he enables us to be able to do offensively that you wouldn’t be able to do with other quarterbacks, it’s all of those things.”
Stafford’s fingerprints on the offense, and his flair, are expressed in each game and in every piece of the playbook. He’s holstering finger-pistols after big throws. His throwing arm sleeve — worn to protect the elbow he spent much of 2022 managing — has been copied by younger teammates in practice (“he comes to L.A., (and) he throws the shooter sleeve on,” joked receiver Cooper Kupp). Stafford has slimmed down a little and sped up a little, too, partially to match schematic changes and partially out of self-preservation.
Stafford is making every throw with every arm angle possible — when healthy, he always has. Side-arm and submarine zips on third down to Tyler Higbee and Demarcus Robinson while on the move in Weeks 15 and 16 are highlights that come to the minds of teammates and coaches, as does a 23-yard shot to Puka Nacua while absorbing a big hit against the Ravens. Of course, the no-look passes always get mentioned.
“He’s got every club in the bag,” said offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur. “I don’t know … how many clubs you get, but he’s stealing.”
Even Stafford’s run fakes are executed with a certain style. In Week 15, after Stafford flipped an end-around handoff to Robinson off a run fake, he nonchalantly walked away with his back to the play. “He just makes it cool,” McVay said. “It just makes it look cooler than what the play is designed (to do). Like, ‘Sh–, I didn’t think it would look that cool.’ He just puts his own personality on these plays.”
Against Cleveland in early December, Stafford got a defensive look at the line of scrimmage that he thought might come up and had discussed with McVay and the coaching staff earlier that week (the counter was added on McVay’s call sheet by Saturday). The Rams’ initial play call was a duo run, but Stafford audibled into the new play, got everyone reset and then hit Nacua for a 70-yard touchdown.
Matthew Stafford must have been licking his chops when he saw this look from the Browns pre snap pic.twitter.com/ZGEogv8EUX
— Ted Nguyen (@FB_FilmAnalysis) December 4, 2023
McVay broke down the play in the all-team meeting the following week to show every player and coach what happened. “(He’s) playing quarterback and doing our job,’” McVay said. “… I’m sitting there saying, ‘Sh–, that’s a pretty good idea. I should’ve thought of that earlier in the week.”
Stafford’s ability to make plays like that — with that kind of flourish — affects his teammates, many of whom spent their teenage years watching him play in Detroit.
“The dude is a legend,” said rookie defensive tackle Kobie Turner. “I just feel a complete sense of calm and peace whenever he’s on the field. … And then he got a little swag to him, when he puts his guns in the holsters. I remember (McVay) detailing, he was showing us some of the film from a previous game we had played and he said, ‘You should never get tired of seeing good ball.’ … He’s the guy.”
Since the day he arrived, Stafford has collaborated with coaches and teammates on play design and strategy. No better example arrived than in the Rams’ Week 4 win at Indianapolis, on a first-and-10 in the second quarter. From under center, Stafford signaled to send Nacua into a cross-formation motion from his initial alignment, and as Stafford collected the snap, Nacua shot through the C-gap, then bent around in an arc and upfield for the 32-yard catch off of a run fake.
Nacua didn’t mind essentially running a semi-circle gasser only to arrive at a spot on the field 15 yards ahead of where he aligned pre-snap.
“The whole time, I feel like I’m running the 200-(meter) curve!” he said, laughing. “Like, just don’t fall over! Keep sprinting! You’ll end up there at some point.”
Stafford thought up the semi-circle in training camp and workshopped it a few times with Nacua and receiver Tutu Atwell. The idea behind the play was to make the defense think it would be one of the jogging-start run blocks that the Rams use on some of their duo plays — hence Nacua cutting upfield through the C-gap, and the play-action involved. Faking the run with the motion and the play-action brought an extra defensive back closer to the line of scrimmage and opened a void in the middle of the field. Off of that successful concept, Stafford said they kept building variations.
“Certain times, that’s sifting a backside defensive end. Other times it’s inserting through the C-gap,” he said. “It’s inserting through the backside B-gap as well. It was a new way to get to something we did in the past, from the front side. It’s off of a lot of the runs that we do. It’s presenting a lot to a defense, right?”
Rams motioning Puka Nacua and releases him through the C-gap. All to run an Over route back to the side he started.
Sean McVay knows he has some fresh legs in the receiver room lol pic.twitter.com/4yqP8sIFlv
— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) October 3, 2023
The vineyard play sheet may have surprised Stafford once, but he quickly realized that there would never be a wrong place or time to talk through a football idea. McVay and Stafford have drawn plays on napkins at restaurants, roughly diagrammed concepts in the air or grass on the field, and sometimes even huddle around a large laundry receptacle in the Rams’ locker room with Kupp after practices.
“I’d say (Stafford) doesn’t stop there. I think he likes to do the whole thing. He wants to be a part of the whole deal,” Kupp said. “He wants to understand everything. He wants to know what the line is doing, why they’re doing it, what the looks are. I think that’s what gets him really excited.
“I mean so many times it’s like, ‘Hey, this would be sweet, huh? This would be kind of nice,’ and then he draws it up on the board. Most of the time I’m like, ‘Yeah, you know what, that looks really good. Half of that stuff I don’t know what it is, but go ahead and go for it.’ And he runs out with a smile on his face to Sean’s office. I’d say 50 percent of the time he comes back with a smile. The other time he’s like, ‘No, he didn’t like it.’ (But) he gets his stuff in pretty often. He’s got the respect of the head coach, certainly, and of the team.”
Sometimes, ideas are soft-launched to LaFleur before McVay. There’s a reason. In his third year with McVay, Stafford has learned exactly how precious the call sheet is to the head coach. McVay cut his teeth under San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan, who was notorious for relentlessly debating every idea and suggestion for the plays that ended up on his own sheet.
Every scenario must be meticulously considered, a process akin to catastrophizing.
“When is this play likely to be called? What are the different defensive structures that they could present? Does this give us the ability to attack the coverage contours and then do we have answers for the potential problems that could arise? It’s all of those things,” said McVay, for every detail of every play.
“There’s things that you say or want done, or think could be good on a Monday, that are shot down by Wednesday, then become more likely and on Friday are on the sheet,” Stafford said. “That’s the way football goes.”
Stafford comes off as unflappable, with little slips of dry humor or jabs of sarcasm. Yet there is some hard-to-define darkness in him, too.
Big hits seem to energize him — “Maybe we should punch him in the gut before games, huh?” McVay riffed after Stafford, already playing through the thumb injury, took a gut-crunching shot by a Seattle defender in Week 11 while running a trick play and was intercepted. Stafford responded with two scoring drives, and the Rams began the 6-1 winning streak that will carry them to the postseason.
“Something about him always plays with a pretty good edge when he has got something to work through,” McVay said.
Environmental chaos and stress — physical and mental — somehow seem to be clarifying for Stafford.
“I have to be completely present, in figuring out how to solve problems on a 10-second clock, with 100,000 people screaming at me,” Stafford said. “You’ve got to be in it. If you’re not, it hasn’t worked for me. I try to live as much as I can that way. Kind of have to, when I’m here. When you’re building plays, plans, whatever it is, you’re kind of all in on those moments to try to figure out the best way to attack whoever it is you’re playing.
“You’re gonna have good days, bad days. Good plays, bad plays. I think, for me, being able to move on to whatever is next — no matter what happened before. … It’s not always easy to do. But it’s something that I think is important.”
Then there’s the 60 minutes Stafford spends in the headset with McVay and the coaching staff during games each week. Stafford can’t respond to the streams of information he receives. The voices in his head diagnosing the defense, the call sheet and the dozen-plus-word play calls — he receives two in case he needs to check into the second option — and the voices in the stadium collide in a dizzying, audible tug-of-war.
In this madness, Stafford still has a flair that his teammates absorb. “In the huddle you get his little one-liners that he throws in there,” said Kupp, laughing. “Sean keeps talking in his ear, calling the play, and (Stafford) is like, ‘I’d give you guys a play, but Sean’s still talking right now.’”
The rest of the havoc arrives after the headset cuts out, after Stafford’s orchestration of this motion and that shift against the defensive look, after the snap itself. Enormous people churn and crash against each other in front of and all around Stafford, and some of them aim for him and he disappears for a moment.
Then you see it: His arm slinging out to one side, his shoulder dipped. The ball leaves his hand in a shot to the right. His eyes are looking left. All it is, is cool.
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