Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › superbowl articles (ie. non- "the call/ the INT" articles)
- This topic has 3 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 10 years, 3 months ago by
zn.
-
AuthorPosts
-
February 2, 2015 at 9:30 am #17819
zn
Moderator
Sherman played with tear in elbowBy John Clayton
http://espn.go.com/nfl/playoffs/201…rback-richard-sherman-need-tommy-john-surgery
Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman played Super Bowl XLIX with torn ligaments in his left elbow that may require Tommy John surgery in the off season, according to a source.
In the NFC Championship game, Sherman suffered ligament damage in his left shoulder. He didn’t miss a play from practice and played the entire Super Bowl with the injury. During the game, he was making tackles and plays using his left arm.
The source indicated that the injury was worse than just an elbow sprain. Although the source didn’t indicate the prognosis and timetable, it is likely he will go Tommy John surgery after the season.
Tommy John surgery is a procedure in which the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) undergoes reconstruction using a tendon from elsewhere in the body.
February 2, 2015 at 9:57 am #17824zn
Moderator
Ten Takeaways from Super Bowl XLIXBy Randy Karraker
http://www.101sports.com/2015/02/02/ten-takeaways-super-bowl-xlix/
The New England Patriots came back from a 24-14 deficit in Super Bowl XLIX, tying the Pittsburgh Steelers with their fourth title, training only the Pittsburgh Steelers with six and the San Francisco 49ers with five. It was one of the most exciting Super Bowls ever. Here are my ten takeaways…
1) Malcolm Butler’s interception with :20 left in the game provided another classic ending provided by a previously relative unknown, turning that guy into a hero. Like Mike Jones of the Rams making The Tackle in Super Bowl XXXIV, or defensive MVP’s such as Dallas’ Larry Brown, Tampa’s Dexter Jackson or Malcolm Smith of the Seahawks last year, Butler has etched his name into Super Bowl lore with one play to win a Super Bowl.
2) I found it amazing that Danny Amendola and Michael Hoomanawanui would play in a Super Bowl together for any team. They were both always hurt for the Rams, but were durable and somewhat productive for New England in 2014. And Amendola was actually productive in the game, grabbing five balls for 48 yards and a touchdown.
3) Like Timmy Smith of the Redskins in 1988, Seattle’s Chris Matthews turned into a star on the Super Bowl stage. During the ’87 season, the rookie Smith carried the ball in four games, totaling 29 carries for 129 yards. In the Super Bowl, Smith carried 22 times for a Super Bowl record 204 yards. Matthews, who had never caught an NFL pass, made that amazing catch to set up Seattle’s first touchdown, and the caught the tying touchdown right before halftime. He finished with four catches for 109 yards and that score. How can the Seahawks find a guy like him working at a Foot Locker store, and have five undrafted receivers in the Super Bowl, yet the Rams fail to get as much production out of drafted receivers Mardy Gilyard, Austin Pettis, Greg Salas, Brian Quick, Chris Givens, Tavon Austin and Stedman Bailey?
4) I thought Seattle dodged a bullet when the Patriots didn’t really utilize their big X-factor, Rob Gronkowski, in the first half. Aside from his 22 yard touchdown catch, he had only two other first half catches for a total of six yards, and six for 68 overall. He did have huge twenty and thirteen yard catches in New England’s game winning drive, but they could have used him much more effectively than they did.
5) I told the people I was with that after Gronkowski’s late first half touchdown that the Patriots had left too much time for Russell Wilson. I figured he’d drive them into field goal range, but he did better than that. As the Packers learned, he has a remarkable ability to put together late drives. Sure enough, he turned in a five play, 80 yard touchdown drive that took just 29 seconds. And what a gutsy call by the Seahawks to run the play with just six seconds on the clock. It was perfect, because if even if it had been incomplete, there were still two second left to try a field goal.
6) What is Tom Brady doing throwing key interceptions? The pick by Jeremy Lane in the end zone on New England’s first possession was a cruncher. New England could have won in a blowout if not for that. The Pats used up more than half a quarter…7:41…and got nothing out of it. And then the Bobby Wagner interception midway through the third quarter to set up Seattle’s third touchdown and make it 24-14 put the Patriots behind the eight ball.
7) I loved the way the officials let the teams play. We saw early on that they weren’t going to call the ticky-tack illegal contact and interference penalties. This is the way the sport was about ten years ago. There are just too many rules in the NFL. It was nice to see a game with some flow that wasn’t consistently interrupted by the zebras.
8) Back in the Patriots run of Super Bowl wins in the early 2000’s, two of the most underrated parts of the team were running back Kevin Faulk and wide receiver Troy Brown. It seemed that whenever New England needed a first down, Brady would find one of those two. It’s the same way now with Shane Vereen and Julian Edelman. While they brought in Brandon LaFell and Amendola, it’s the home grown guys that the Patriots go to in crunch time. Vereen had eleven catches for 64 yards and added four runs for thirteen. Edelman had nine catches for 109 and the lead touchdown just before the two minute warning.
9) Jermaine Kearse’s fourth quarter catch provided shades of the heroic David Tyree in the same stadium in 2008. What an amazing, athletic catch that was, that should have provided Seattle the opportunity to win. But the Seahawks didn’t take advantage of their great fortune. Like the Rams in San Diego this season, there was no good reason to throw the ball in the middle of the field when they had Marshawn Lynch, who led the NFL with seventeen touchdowns this season, from the one yard line and a time out left. Like Rams QB Shaun Hill, Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson threw an incredibly inopportune interception into the end zone. So Kearse’s miracle was wasted and New England won the Super Bowl for the first time in a decade. Nine of Lynch’s seventeen scores this season were runs of six or fewer yards, with five of those being three or less. And the ‘Hawks decided to throw the ball on 2nd and goal from the one.
10) During the week leading up to the game, former Rams quarterback Kurt Warner was asked about Bill Belichick’s cheating ways on KJR Radio in Seattle and said “I don’t want to believe that there was anything outside of his team beat our team. That’s what I want to believe. There’s a sliver of a doubt because I think, as a human, you can’t help it.”
“To know that if you were a part of that process at that time, was there any advantage they gained in any game, not just our Super Bowl game, but maybe a game before that to get to the Super Bowl? I mean, all those things enter your mind.”
With that thought, Warner had to deliver the Lombardi Trophy to the victorious Patriots. It must have been a walk of mixed emotions to that podium.
And so New England has their fourth Lombardi Trophy.
We’ll find out soon enough if the NFL chooses to punish them for have deflated footballs in their game against Indianapolis. But with authentic footballs and plenty of safeguards in place to prevent another Spygate episode, they have to feel good about winning a Super Bowl in a legitimate manner.
February 2, 2015 at 1:27 pm #17837zn
ModeratorRams-related Super Bowl takeaways
By Nick Wagoner | ESPN.com
http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/
EARTH CITY, Mo. — After one of the most exciting Super Bowls in league history, the New England Patriots emerged with the Lombardi Trophy after a dramatic late interception at the goal line.
For fans of the St. Louis Rams, that was only one of a handful of unfortunate takeaways from the game that brought up some bad memories.
With football over until the fall, let’s take a quick spin around some of the game’s events before fully moving into the offseason: •
Warner
There is no doubt that Rams fans probably would have liked to see Sunday’s game end in a scoreless tie. The Seattle Seahawks are an NFC West division rival and the New England Patriots are still despised in these parts for winning the 2002 Super Bowl under a cloud of suspicion that still exists here from the Spygate incident. So when beloved former Rams quarterback Kurt Warner presented the trophy to the Patriots after the game, it didn’t go over too well in Rams nation. I asked my Twitter followers for thoughts on that as it was happening. I’d post a tweet or two here, but we have to keep it family friendly. It was that bad.
•Obviously, the final Seattle play call will draw attention from all corners of cyberspace and beyond. I heard multiple analysts call it “the worst call in NFL history” given the situation and the stakes. I’ll leave such discussions to others, but here is what surprised me about it: Seattle’s M.O. is playing stout defense and relying on the power running of back Marshawn Lynch on offense. It’s their identity and it isn’t fancy. Even on defense, there is nothing special about what they do schematically, they just do what they do, and they do it very well. So for them to abandon that philosophy with the world championship at stake was jarring to see. And it also probably brought up some painful memories for the Rams and their fans.
Wilson
Russell Wilson’s interception was the only one thrown from the 1-yard line this season on 111 drop backs around the NFL, according to ESPN Stats & Info. Though it was the only interception thrown from the opponent’s 1, it wasn’t the only one thrown in close with the game at stake. Against San Diego on Nov. 23, Rams quarterback Shaun Hill threw an interception to Chargers defensive back Marcus Gilchrist from San Diego’s 4-yard line. That play also came on second down, with enough time for the Rams to run and with a timeout remaining. A touchdown likely would’ve given the Rams a 31-27 win. Instead, they lost 27-24. Then-Rams offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer took heat for that call, but Hill had an open receiver in running back Benny Cunningham and simply never saw Gilchrist. The Seahawks had Lynch and a power run ability unmatched by most teams around the league, which makes their call far more head scratching than the one the Rams went with in a similar setting. But, like with Hill, all of the blame shouldn’t go to Seattle’s coaching staff. Wilson made a bad decision and throw similar to Hill. The call was for a pick play, and Wilson has to be sure that his receiver comes clean before letting it go. And to New England’s credit, young defensive back Malcolm Butler made a great play.
•Two former Rams played for the Patriots in the game, but three will walk away with championship rings. Receiver Danny Amendola, who not so long ago was the Rams’ best wideout, came up big for New England with five catches for 48 yards and a touchdown. Tight end Michael Hoomanawanui also played for the Patriots, coming up with a catch for 4 yards. One player not on the 53-man roster but who also had a cup of coffee with the Rams is quarterback Garrett Gilbert, who was on New England’s practice squad.
•It doesn’t mean anything but in the postgame, Patriots receiver Julian Edelman began by saying “St. Louis” is a wonderful team before quickly correcting himself to Seattle.
•That will do it for the actual games this season, which means we can now transition into the silly season. The Rams still need to hire an offensive coordinator, but the NFL scouting combine starts in just 16 days.
February 3, 2015 at 7:53 pm #17891zn
Moderator
Gordo’s TipsheetHere is what folks were writing about the Super Bowl:
Mike Tanier, Bleacher Report: “OK, it was just a football game. But it may have been the greatest football game ever. The Patriots’ 28-24 victory over the Seahawks in Super Bowl XLIX on Sunday night was a runaway mine-car ride along a roller-coaster track through a waterfall during an earthquake. It was not easily summarized. Sunday’s Super Bowl was better than Super Bowl XXXIV (Rams over Titans; Kevin Dyson reaching for the goal line), better than Super Bowl XXIII (Joe Montana sees John Candy) and better than Super Bowl XXV (Giants beat Bills, Scott Norwood implicated). It was better than the two Super Bowls the Patriots won with late field goals and better than Super Bowl XLII, with David Tyree and Plaxico Burress.”
Michael Rosenberg, SI.com: “So let’s sum up here: The Seahawks didn’t want to leave any time on the clock. So they waited 33 seconds to run a play. Then they called a pass, which would have stopped the clock if it fell incomplete. It wasn’t any pass, either — it was a dangerous pass. Meanwhile, (Marshawn) Lynch was running a decoy pass pattern instead of carrying the ball like he should have. Hey, we all second-guess coaches. It’s an American pastime. Usually, the coach has a decent reason for doing what he did, and almost always, we must acknowledge that the coach knows way more about the situation than we do. Pete Carroll is a great football coach who made an incredibly dumb decision, and he learned an incredibly painful lesson. He didn’t just waste a play. He wasted his chance to win another Super Bowl.”
Seth Wickersham, ESPN.com: “The two weeks leading up to Super Bowl XLIX were probably the strangest of Brady’s career. They were certainly the most emotional. He was deeply offended at the notion that he intentionally and illegally deflated footballs, and unlike Spygate — which was really more of an indictment of (Bill) Belichick than the players — Deflategate was the first time Brady’s personal integrity was up for debate. He was angry and hurt, and his answers — he privately told friends that he had nothing to hide, and more or less echoed it in public — seemed to produce only more questions. For the first time anyone can remember, Brady seemed rattled, angry, hurt. But he never played the slighted card, the maxim of his youth. As he’s aged, he’s learned that it’s not healthy to live in a state of constantly having to prove yourself. He hasn’t mellowed. Rather, he’s improved on his Hall of Fame career not by reminding himself that he was once a sixth-round pick but by accepting the fact that he was a sixth-round pick and obsessively working on his weaknesses. He told friends he wanted to play free, unburdened, fiercely motivated but not angry.”
Judy Battista, NFL.com: “But while everybody else ponders Brady’s place in history, he had no use for it Sunday night. He will be 38 when next season begins, and a loss might have marked his last, best chance to win another Super Bowl. This victory, though, opens up all kinds of possibilities, considering the well-documented regimen of diet and body maintenance that allows him to keep himself in shape to play. When the Patriots were trailing entering the fourth quarter, it was easy to imagine the beginning of the end for Brady in New England. Now, it is tempting to wonder if he can add one more title before he is finished.”
Jason La Canfora, CBSSports.com: “Of the thousands of words Tom Brady uttered Sunday night to the press and on the postgame shows — after his coronation as the NFL’s all-time leader in Super Bowl touchdown passes; after tying his idol Joe Montana and Terry Bradshaw as the only quarterbacks to win four Lombardi Trophies; after winning his third Super Bowl MVP trophy — eight simple words resonated above all else. With the football word scurrying to quantify Brady’s place in history and compare his legacy to all those who have come before him, Brady managed to find the proper perspective himself without anyone really noticing. He was asked, in the direct aftermath of another exultant moment, whether he had stopped to contemplate his place in history. ‘No,’ Brady said, politely but matter-of-factly. ‘I’ve got a lot of football left.’ Never has so little said so much. In the rush to proclaim Super Bowl 49 in the pantheon of the game’s lore (and surely this 28-24, twisting-and-turning thriller with the bizarre ending at University of Phoenix Stadium ranks way up there), and in the race to place New England’s fourth title amid all other dynasties, we forget that Brady is far from finished.”
MEGAPHONE
“We beat ’em, bro. We beat ’em. … I’m speechless. Best back in the league, and the 1-yard-line? It wasn’t even the 1 — it was like half a yard. I will never understand that, bro. I will never understand it. I will never understand. … When Jermaine caught that ball, I felt it was meant to be for us. Oh, no doubt — we’re gonna score. Beast Mode. Beast Mode! Best back on the (expletive) planet. That’s crazy!”
Seahawks linebacker Bruce Irvin, to NFL. com, on the unhappy Super Bowl ending.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.