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Morning Ram-blings: Fisher’s approach
By Nick Wagonerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/12448/morning-ram-blings-fishers-approach
EARTH CITY, Mo. — The St. Louis Rams’ 1-3 start to the 2014 NFL season has clearly been a disappointment given the expectations the team had for itself and many from the outside had going in.
But Sports Illustrated’s Austin Murphy wrote in his latest piece that despite those early disappointments, coach Jeff Fisher has remained steady in his leadership for the young team.
In the piece, Murphy offers plenty of intriguing details, including the Rams’ apparent belief that if healthy quarterback Sam Bradford could still have a spot on the team next year (albeit at a greatly reduced price). There’s also some insight into the way Fisher’s interview with owner Stan Kroenke went down.
The focal point of the article, though, is how Fisher is equipped to handle the adversity and rough spots that come through the course of a season.
I.C.Y.M.I.
A roundup of Wednesday’s Rams stories appearing on ESPN.com. … In the Ram-blings, we began with the inspirational story of Zac Stacy and his brother. … In this week’s Buzz Video, I discussed how the next two weeks will tell us a lot more about Austin Davis’ future. … The newest edition of Looking Back at the Greatest Show on Turf catches up with receiver Torry Holt. … The Rams added linebacker Will Herring to replace released Ray-Ray Armstrong. … We closed the day with an update on Stacy, who will likely miss some practice time but probably not game action.
Elsewhere:
As we begin moving toward “Monday Night Football,” Jon Gruden discussed the Rams’ need to keep Colin Kaepernick contained.
Great read from Steve Wulf on the big trade the Dallas Cowboys made with the Minnesota Vikings involving running back Herschel Walker.
At 101sports.com, Anthony Stalter provides his three plays that kept the Rams from beating Philadelphia.
Here’s the video from Fisher’s weekly radio show.
At stltoday.com, Jim Thomas explores the Rams’ disappointing special teams performance early in the season.
RamBillParticipant’99 Rams have gift of gab
• By Jim ThomasSeveral members of the ’99 Rams Super Bowl championship team have done anything but fade into the sunset since their playing careers ended. In fact, it’s tough to turn on a television without seeing one former Ram or another talking football.
“It’s good to watch those guys have some success away from football, and on the camera,” said Fred Miller, the starting right tackle for the Super Bowl XXXIV champs. “They’re definitely charismatic guys.”
And gabby. For reporters covering that team, walking into the locker room for interviews was like strolling through a buffet line of quotes. You could pick up some humor here, some insight there, a dose of strong opinion, with a side order of perspective.
“It’s funny you say that because being in the locker room with those guys, we could talk,” wide receiver Torry Holt said. “We could talk with the best of ’em. Marshall, he always loved to debate. He and Tyoka (Jackson) used to debate all the time. Kevin Carter could talk and London (Fletcher) had his opinions.”
They’re still talking. Faulk and quarterback Kurt Warner are featured analysts on the NFL Network. Faulk also does television analyst work for Rams preseason games along with Holt. Warner also does radio analyst work on Monday Night Football for Westwood One.
Carter does college football studio work for ESPNU on Saturdays. Quarterback Trent Green is a game analyst for CBS but also does studio work for CBS Sports Network. Fletcher is part of the crew that brings you That Other Pregame Show every Sunday morning on the CBS Sports Network.
D’Marco Farr, a Pro Bowl defensive tackle for the ’99 champions, is the game analyst for Rams radio and is one of the hosts of the Fast Lane sports talk show on WXOS (101.1 FM).
Starting left guard Tom Nutten, who is fluent in German, has been a television “expert” for Super Bowl coverage in Germany in recent years.
Away from the mike, they will have plenty to talk about this Sunday and Monday during a variety of events scheduled to commemorate the 15th anniversary of the Rams’ Super Bowl XXXIV title.
The keystone events are the “Greatest Show on Turf Celebration” at Union Station Hotel on Sunday night, and halftime ceremonies during the Rams’ Monday night game against San Francisco at the Edward Jones Dome.
“Not only were we talented football team guys who could handle their business on the football field and in the classroom, and went out and performed at a high level on Sundays,” Holt said. “We were renaissance. We had guys doing so many other things while they were playing. And once their careers were over, they just went right into what their hobbies were. We just had those kind of men on the team.”
Among all these talking heads, perhaps the biggest surprise in the group is Warner.
“It’s really nice to see how Kurt has come out of his shell,” Miller said. “You know, when he first started playing, he was just kind of the quiet guy that didn’t say a whole lot. He showed up for work and did his job. Now he’s a blooming television star.
“But you knew Kevin Carter had it in him. You knew Marshall Faulk had it in him. D’Marco Farr, definitely.”
And you knew Fletcher, who retired as a player after the 2013 season, had the potential as well because he was never shy about expressing himself as a Ram.
“I guess back then I was one of the guys that you would love to get a quote from because I would say anything,” Fletcher said, laughing.
True.
Faulk agreed with Miller’s assessment on the young Warner.
“Kurt wasn’t a big talker,” Faulk said. “Kurt was more of a surprise that it was something that he wanted to do. I didn’t see him going towards broadcasting when we played. But he does a great job, man. I enjoy working with him.”
As for Faulk, he takes his NFL Network job as seriously as he did his playing career.
“That’s my life right now,” Faulk said. “I’m consumed with that pretty much. That’s what I dedicate my time to, trying to become a better analyst, better broadcaster, being around the game of football.”
Because of their radio work, Warner and Farr will have to make a mad dash down to the field for Monday night’s halftime ceremonies — followed by a mad dash back up to the broadcast booths on the fifth floor of the Dome for the start of the second half.
The past two seasons that the Rams have had alumni weekend ceremonies at the Dome, Farr has been reduced to waving to the crowd from his radio booth at halftime. But he doesn’t want to do that this time because nearly the entire 1999 roster will be in town and on the field Monday night. Who knows? It could be the last time they’re all gathered together like this, and Farr doesn’t want to miss it.
Tickets for the Greatest Show celebration Sunday at Union Station remain available at http://www.greatestshowonturf.com. Tickets for the Rams-49ers game are available at http://www.stlouisrams.com.
October 8, 2014 at 4:59 pm in reply to: Player vids & articles: Quick, Will Herring, Davis, Donald, Saffold, Watts #9353RamBillParticipantRyan Riddle joined Kevin Wheeler on 101ESPN to discuss Austin Davis and the phenomenal performances he’s had, fixing the mistakes that come with a young team, the up and coming talent we see with Aaron Donald, and a preview of the Rams/49ers. (10:29)
October 8, 2014 at 3:03 pm in reply to: Journalists set up the 9ers game (Wagoner, Thomas, audios, vids, etc.) #9348RamBillParticipantESPN’s Jon Gruden explains why the Rams must contain QB Colin Kaepernick to have a chance against the 49ers on “Monday Night Football.” (2:13)
http://www.rams-news.com/gruden-containing-kaepernick-key-for-rams-on-monday-night-football-video/
October 8, 2014 at 2:53 pm in reply to: Journalists set up the 9ers game (Wagoner, Thomas, audios, vids, etc.) #9347RamBillParticipantZac Stacy’s calf injury not serious
By Nick Wagonerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/12427/zac-stacys-calf-injury-not-serious
EARTH CITY, Mo. — After coughing up a costly fumble in the second half of the St. Louis Rams’ loss to the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday, running back Zac Stacy did not return to the game.
Many quickly assumed Stacy had been benched for his miscue but there was a press box announcement soon after declaring Stacy’s return doubtful because of a calf injury. Upon further inspection, it sounds like the injury wasn’t serious enough to keep Stacy from missing more game time.
“It looks like he may miss some practice time this week,” coach Jeff Fisher said. “But, I think, preliminary evaluation is it doesn’t look like he’s going to miss the game. But, we’ll see.”
Stacy had 11 carries for 42 yards and four catches for 36 yards against the Eagles before departing, though his role in the offense has already reduced to more of a timeshare with fellow running back Benny Cunningham. Cunningham got most of the work in Stacy’s place and figures to continue to get plenty of opportunities moving forward after providing solid production against the Eagles.
Cunningham finished with a touchdown and 47 yards on seven carries and three catches for 24 yards against Philadelphia. He also handled kick return duties with Chris Givens declared a pregame inactive.
“Benny was solid,” Fisher said. “He didn’t get much help from his teammates on kickoff return but he did a nice job of fielding the ball and hitting it up in there. Offensively, I though he played well without the ball, as Zac did. Unfortunately Zac put one on the ground but I thought both the backs ran fairly well.”
Even if Stacy is able to play Monday night against the San Francisco 49ers, it’s probably safe to assume that Cunningham will continue to share most of the work with rookie Trey Watts also stealing a few carries here and there.
RamBillParticipantWatch head coach Jeff Fisher’s weekly press conference. Fisher: “I’m very pleased with Austin Davis at this point”(4:55)
http://www.rams-news.com/fishers-monday-press-conference-video/
- This reply was modified 10 years, 1 month ago by RamBill.
October 6, 2014 at 5:05 pm in reply to: journalists do the Eagles game post-mortem…Wagoner, Thomas, etc. #9220RamBillParticipantTen Takeaways from Sunday’s 34-28 Loss in Philadelphia
By Randy Karrakerhttp://www.101sports.com/2014/10/06/ten-takeaways-sundays-34-28-loss-philadelphia/
1. The defense played well enough to win this game. Philadelphia scored touchdowns off of a blocked punt and a sack-fumble, and then had to travel just 24 yards after a Zac Stacy fumble in the third quarter. The Eagles had to move the ball 24 yards to score 21 of their points. Otherwise, the Rams’ defense allowed a touchdown pass, two field goals and a total of 328 yards to an offense that had averaged 367.5 yards and 21.5 points per game. It doesn’t look like it, but Gregg Williams’ defense was just fine against the Eagles.
2. Not only is Austin Davis the real deal, so is Benny Cunningham.
Benny CunninghamBenny Cunningham
Cunningham had runs of 13, 14 and 11 yards, with the 14-yarder being a touchdown. He had seven carries for 47 yards, and shows tremendous burst through the line.
Davis completed six passes of 22 yards or more, and has three TD passes in each of his last two games. The explosiveness of the Rams’ offense in the last two games has been unlike anything we’ve seen since Marc Bulger was in his prime in 2006.
3. Brian Quick is on his way to an historic season. The last Ram receiver to have a 1,000-yard season was Torry Holt in 2007. In this day and age, it’s incomprehensible that a team can go six seasons without a 1,000-yard receiver. Quick is also on pace for a dozen touchdowns.
The last time a Rams receiver had 12 TDs in a season was Holt in 2003. So a quarter of the way through his third season, Quick is having his breakout year.
4. Should Trumaine Johnson start when he’s healthy? E.J. Gaines has played very well all season, and on Sunday had his first NFL fumble recovery and his first interception. Gaines effectively covered fellow Mizzou alum Jeremy Maclin for most of the game. He had four tackles and led the team with two passes defensed, and deserves to keep playing as long as he stays at that level.
5. #Sackcity?
AC1W5095Robert Quinn
A Rams defense that has compiled 51 and 53 sacks the last two seasons is on pace for … four sacks. That’s not Michael Brockers on pace for four, or an injured Chris Long or a statistically diminished Robert Quinn.
In a disastrous turn for this line, it had no sacks yesterday and has one for the season – and is on pace for four.
As D’Marco Farr said when we tried to come up with a name for the defense during training camp, don’t give them a name until they’ve done something.
6. Lance Kendricks must stop his false starts. Kendricks had two false starts in the opener against Minnesota and two more on Sunday. That’s inexcusable.
Players always say that the most valuable thing they have is playing time. Kendricks is a great guy and a talented performer, but his pre-snap penalties have to stop. If the only way to get him to focus is to take away some playing time, the Rams have rookie Alex Bayer and Corey Harkey available to play the position. Kendricks turned a second-and-6 into a second-and-11 (although Stacy bailed him out with a 15-yard run). His second turned a second-and-7 into a second-and-12 that forced the Rams to punt. And after that punt…
7. Ray-Ray Armstrong committed a ridiculous unnecessary-roughness penalty. At some point, the Rams plan to be good. If you have those plans, you can’t be giving the other team 15 yards because of stupid penalties. So far, you can’t trace a Rams loss to Armstrong’s foolish and selfish actions. At some point, it’s going to happen and will devastate a team, like Richie Incognito did during his Rams career.
8. Austin Pettis. Pettis is on the team because of his excellent hands. He has to haul in at least one of those passes in the final minute of play. Catching one of those balls would have given Davis a great chance to get into the end zone and finish off the comeback.
9. I’m concerned about Jake Long.
AC1W6303Jake Long
I fear that his ACL injury has compromised him. In a position where you have to get low, it doesn’t seem like he can. While the rest of the offensive line is able to get into a three-point stance for running plays, it doesn’t seem like Long can even bend down into that stance.\
He had the tough play when he wasn’t able to recover a fumble that allowed Philly’s Cedric Thornton to score the Eagles’ third touchdown. If indeed he is too hurt to be great, one would hope Greg Robinson is close to being able to start at left tackle.
10. At the end of the day, I’m glass half full on this loss. I was at the 1986 game at Busch Stadium when the Cardinals trailed Tampa Bay 28-3 in the fourth quarter, but rallied with four touchdowns for a 31-28 win. Those kinds of wins can energize a team, and a Rams win would have done that with a victory.
As bad as the first half was, hopefully this young team learned some things in the last 20 minutes at the Linc. They were up 21-0 against Dallas 24 minutes into that game, then in the next five-and-a-half quarters were outscored 68-10, then ran off another 21-0 in the last 15:03 at Philly. They know what they’re capable of. Hopefully they’ll carry that last quarter into next Monday night’s game vs. San Francisco.
By the way, did you notice that in the Rams’ three losses, they’ve allowed 34 points each time?
RamBillParticipantTight end Jared Cook talks with the media following the 34-28 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.
http://www.rams-news.com/jared-cook-everybody-on-offense-knew-we-would-go-down-and-score-video/
RamBillParticipantJeff Fisher reviews his squad’s 34-28 loss to Philadelphia right after the game with D’Marco Farr & Steve Savard.
RamBillParticipantMorning Ram-blings: Monday game balls
By Nick Wagonerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/12359/morning-ram-blings-monday-game-balls-5
PHILADELPHIA — Welcome to Monday morning after the St. Louis Rams’ 34-28 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday at Lincoln Financial Field.
It was a wild Week 5 in the NFL where the Cleveland Browns put together a record-setting comeback, Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning offered another virtuoso performance and the Dallas Cowboys came away with an impressive win in the battle for Texas.
To get caught up with all the stars of the day, our ESPN NFL Nation reporters handed out game balls for all of Sunday’s action.
As I mentioned in the post, it would have been easy to give the honor to quarterback Austin Davis for the third consecutive game but I opted to spread the wealth a bit by giving some props to rookie cornerback E.J. Gaines. He bounced back nicely from a rough day against the Cowboys and came up with his first career interception.
If only the Rams could get more than just a player or two worthy of a game ball each week, perhaps they could find themselves on the winning side on a more consistent basis.
I.C.Y.M.I.
A roundup of Sunday’s Rams stories appearing on ESPN.com. … Rapid Reaction offered thoughts and observations from the Rams’ latest loss. … Coming out of the locker room, receiver Austin Pettis’ disappointment in his two late drops stood out most. … The Rams continue to find ways to make winning even harder than it already is. … Davis nearly led a miracle comeback but impressed teammates and coaches alike with another 300-yard performance. … Eagles reporter Phil Sheridan and I discuss our game ball nominees.
Elsewhere:
Sheridan writes that the Eagles once again found a way to escape with a win.
Looking ahead, the Niners were able to overcome the Chiefs behind a little trickery.
At 101sports.com, Fisher discussed the loss with the Rams’ radio team.
At stltoday.com, Jeff Gordon offers his weekly report card.
ProFootballTalk.com’s Mike Florio reports that the NFL expects to have a team in Los Angeles in the next 12 to 24 months.
October 6, 2014 at 1:44 am in reply to: journalists do the Eagles game post-mortem…Wagoner, Thomas, etc. #9200RamBillParticipantRams notes: Davis is bright spot in Rams’ loss
• By Jim ThomasPHILADELPHIA • In his first appearance since being “officially” designated as the Rams’ starting quarterback, Austin Davis was inaccurate early but extremely effective late.
He was knocked down repeatedly by the Philadelphia pass rush. But he kept getting up, stayed poised and nearly led the Rams to a miracle finish in a 34-28 loss to the Eagles.
“Of the bright things in this game, that probably is No. 1 because he was calm and collected and just so focused on what we needed to do,” coach Jeff Fisher said. “He was not flustered at all. He took some hits, and we’ve gotta get that corrected, but he can overcome.
“He knows the position’s difficult to play and he can overcome a mistake. I think that’s the mark of a fine young quarterback.”
Several of Davis’ early throws were high, which is often a sign of an overly excited quarterback. But Davis said he was no more excited than usual before Sunday’s game.
“If I knew the answer, I probably would’ve fixed it,” Davis said. “We just didn’t get into a rhythm offensively early. We knew if we just kind of stayed the course that it would eventually come, and it did. It was just too little, too late.”
When Philadelphia scored to take a 34-7 lead late in the third quarter, Davis had completed a modest 15 of 28 passes for 180 yards with one touchdown. But then he got hot. Until he threw three incompletions to end the game — two of which could’ve been caught by Austin Pettis — Davis completed 14 of 18 throws for 195 yards and two TDs over a span of 16 minutes.
He finished with 29 completions in 49 attempts for 375 yards, three TDs and a passer rating of 103.7.
The 375 yards passing were the most for a Rams quarterback since 2003, when Marc Bulger also threw for 375 in a 33-21 victory over Pittsburgh on Oct. 26 of that year.
Davis’ 49 attempts were the most for the Rams since 2004, with Bulger throwing 49 times in a 28-25 loss to New Orleans on Sept. 26 of that year.
“I take my hat off to the guy, to tell you truth,” wide receiver Kenny Britt said. “Coming in as a young guy, stepping up each and every day, and growing each day.
“Every time he goes into the huddle, you can see his confidence go up. After taking big hits and making some plays out there, I believe we’re gonna have a good year out there with him.”
PETTIS’ WOES
Normally one of the most sure-handed Rams receivers, Pettis had a costly drop over the middle on the team’s final possession of the day. A catch would’ve given the Rams a first down around the Philadelphia 25 with 48 seconds to play.
On the next play, it looked like Pettis had made a leaping grab down the left sideline, but Eagles nickel back Brandon Boykin knocked the ball out for another incompletion.
Pettis was one of the Rams’ heroes last month in Tampa Bay, when his leaping 27-yard catch in traffic set up a game-winning field goal by Greg Zuerlein in a 19-17 triumph. On Sunday, a disconsolate Pettis could only take the blame.
“At the end of the game, I’m expecting to make a big play,” Pettis said. “Austin threw two great balls and as a receiver you’ve got to come down with those, especially at that time in the game. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to make that play for the team.”
GIVENS SITS
With Tavon Austin back from a knee injury, the Rams dressed only five wide receivers. Chris Givens was the odd man out, designated as one of the team’s pregame inactives.
The others: QB Case Keenum, RB Tre Mason, S Maurice Alexander, CB Trumaine Johnson (knee), CB Brandon McGee (foot), and C/G Barrett Jones (back).
RamBillParticipantAustin Davis: “We just have to keep moving forward”
Austin Davis talks with the media following the 34-28 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.
http://www.rams-news.com/austin-davis-we-just-have-to-keep-moving-forward-video/
RamBillParticipantWatch quarterback Austin Davis talk with the media following the 34-28 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.
http://www.rams-news.com/austin-davis-its-a-tale-of-two-halves-video/
October 5, 2014 at 11:00 pm in reply to: journalists do the Eagles game post-mortem…Wagoner, Thomas, etc. #9179RamBillParticipantAustin Davis impressive again in loss
By Nick Wagonerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/12356/austin-davis-impressive-again-in-loss
PHILADELPHIA — For St. Louis Rams quarterback Austin Davis, there was nothing different about Sunday’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles.
Making his first start since coach Jeff Fisher named him the regular starter, Davis didn’t change his routine or his mindset. It was another game just like the two starts that preceded it.
“I really tried to approach it the same,” Davis said. “There’s no difference in preparing if you’re the [No. 1] or the [No. 2]. You’ve still got to be ready to roll. I felt about the same. I had normal pregame jitters and after that first hit, you are playing ball.”
Davis took no shortage of hits in the first half of his team’s 34-28 loss to the Eagles. One of those hits was a fumble on a sack that resulted in an Eagles touchdown on a play that Davis pinned on himself. As the Rams searched for answers in pass protection, Davis took shot after shot, coughing up another fumble and missing on five of his first six pass attempts.
“They brought more than we had and I’ve got to get it pushed and I held on to the ball too long,” Davis said. “That’s one of those big plays that can’t happen and something I’ve got to learn from.”
By the time Davis’ blockers offered some measure of protection, the Rams were down 34-7 and on their way to a blowout loss similar to the season opener — a 34-6 drubbing against Minnesota.
But Davis remained unflappable, leading a comeback charge that actually put the Rams in position to pull off a victory in the closing moments. It was the same unrelenting, fiery approach that has won over coaches and teammates since the moment Davis stepped into the lineup.
“It’s pretty awesome,” tight end Jared Cook said. “He just carries himself with a different type of attitude that we’ve never seen before. He leads us and does it well.”
From the moment the Rams went down 34-7 with 2:15 to go in the third quarter, Davis was 14-for-21 for 195 yards and two touchdowns with a pair of scrambles for 19 yards. The argument, of course, can be made that the Eagles were playing a prevent defense with such a big lead but that doesn’t really explain how the Rams were able to score three touchdowns on consecutive drives that totaled 7 minutes, 20 seconds.
Davis finished with his second consecutive 300-yard game, going 29-of-49 for 375 yards with three touchdowns and no interceptions, making him the third quarterback to hit those numbers in a game this season and the first to do it on the road.
“He was calm and collected and so focused on what he needed to do,” Fisher said. “He was not flustered at all. He took some hits and we’ve got to get that corrected. But he knows the position is difficult to play and he can overcome that mistake. I think that’s the mark of a fine young quarterback.”
The only thing Davis couldn’t do Sunday was complete what would have been one of the most miraculous comebacks in franchise history. Starting the game’s final drive from the Rams 7, Davis promptly hit receiver Brian Quick for a gain of 43 yards down the right sideline. In that moment it looked like the Davis magic circa Tampa Bay in a come-from-behind Week 2 win would reappear.
But a couple of drops by receiver Austin Pettis, a false-start penalty and a miss on a deep throw for Quick on fourth down ended any comeback hopes.
“I thought they were at a little bit of a loss, didn’t know what to call and everything they did we were able to find the completion and move the ball down the field. So, I had no doubts in my mind we’d win the ball game, 35-34, to be honest with you,” Davis said. “And it just didn’t happen.”
While Davis has impressed in his first three starts, he’s done it against the soft defenses of the Buccaneers, Dallas and now Philadelphia. Things are about to get tougher with games against division rivals San Francisco and Seattle in the next two weeks.
Davis deserves credit for what he has done so far but the next two weeks should offer a greater referendum on what’s real and what isn’t when it comes to the Rams’ young quarterback.
October 5, 2014 at 8:07 pm in reply to: journalists do the Eagles game post-mortem…Wagoner, Thomas, etc. #9163RamBillParticipantRams can’t overcome themselves against Eagles
By Nick Wagonerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/12340/rams-cant-overcome-themselves-against-eagles
PHILADELPHIA — The thin line between winning and losing an NFL football game is hard to bloat, but the St. Louis Rams seem to have a knack for finding a way to decrease an already minuscule margin for error every week.
Sunday’s 34-28 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles offered plenty of examples of what can happen when the Rams team up with their opponent to beat the Rams. Taking nothing away from the Eagles, who have found a way to win four of five tries this season, the Rams once again provided plenty of help.
It’s a trait found in each of the team’s three losses this season and one that goes back for the better part of a decade. Against the Eagles, they consistently loaded up on silly penalties (10 for 82 yards), dropped passes (six by unofficial count), busted coverages (Jeremy Maclin’s 24-yard touchdown catch was every bit as open as the 68-yard strike to Dez Bryant two weeks ago), struggled in protection (Trent Cole’s sack and forced fumble resulted in a defensive touchdown) and even offered up a special teams miscue that had nothing to do with a yellow penalty flag (which is usually the norm).
“Overall, when you have penalties, you turn the ball over, you have a punt blocked for a touchdown, numerous drops, it’s not winning football,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said.
For a team coming off a bye, the blame should be shared by all for the repeated mistakes. And it won’t get much better as the Rams are only scratching the surface on a brutal schedule that includes nothing but 2013 playoff teams and the NFC West-leading Arizona Cardinals over the next seven weeks.
Although the Rams offered a praiseworthy second-half comeback, they set their own ominous tone on the game’s first drive. Loading up in three tight end formations, the offense looked like a group poised to run the ball right at Philadelphia. Instead, they began with three head-scratching pass plays, each falling incomplete as the Eagles had Rams quarterback Austin Davis under siege.
Just 16 seconds into the game, the Rams sent punter Johnny Hekker onto the field. In most cases, Rams’ special teams errors come in the form of a penalty, but they made an error much bigger this time.
Before every punt, the punt team is supposed to count defenders from the outside in. Depending on how many defenders are on the side, each blocker knows who his man is at the snap. According to the Rams’ Chase Reynolds, somebody miscounted which left a gaping hole in the “A” gap for the Eagles’ James Casey to run through untouched.
On the replay, each Rams blocker on the left side of the line turns to the left and the opening comes between linebacker Ray Ray Armstrong and tight end Cory Harkey. Reynolds had to choose between Casey and tight end Trey Burton, who was also his assignment on the play. Reynolds picked up Burton and Casey blocked the punt. Safety Chris Maragos scooped it up for the touchdown and a quick and easy 7-0 lead the Eagles would not surrender.
“The guy (on the outside) was really wide so sometimes for the guards and tackles to see the wide guys out there, it’s kind of difficult,” Reynolds said. “But like I said, they did a fantastic job. Just one little error like that can cost you.”
It wouldn’t have cost the Rams so much had it been the only such error on the day. The penalty problems should be expected at this point and though they had dissipated some in the first three weeks, dropped passes have also been a hallmark of recent Rams teams. But while those result in lost downs or yards, the miscommunication continues to result in big plays.
Such was the case on Maclin’s touchdown catch as cornerback Lamarcus Joyner was supposed to stay with Maclin but thought safety Rodney McLeod was supposed to take over the coverage. Instead, neither covered Maclin and he was wide open for the touchdown that made it 34-7.
“It was a miscommunication,” McLeod said. “It was a formation we saw earlier and made the right call earlier but that time it was just a mistake but that was one thing we have got to preach on. That could be the difference in a ball game.”
For the Rams, those types of plays couldn’t be the difference in a ball game. They are.
October 5, 2014 at 7:52 pm in reply to: journalists do the Eagles game post-mortem…Wagoner, Thomas, etc. #9161RamBillParticipantAustin Pettis disappointed in late drops
By Nick Wagonerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/12332/austin-pettis-disappointed-in-late-drops
PHILADELPHIA — Observed and heard in the locker room after the St. Louis Rams’ 34-28 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles:
Pettis dejected: Rams wide receiver Austin Pettis was visibly upset after he had a pair of costly drops on the team’s potential game-winning drive. Pettis has stuck on the roster because of his sure hands and ability to come through late like he did in Week 2 against Tampa Bay but was unable to haul in a pair of catchable balls on second and third down in Eagles territory.
“It’s the end of the game, there’s going to be a lot of contested balls, and there’s no excuses on any of them,” Pettis said. “I had the ball in my hands long enough to get the catch. I’ve just got to hold on to it.”
Stacy’s day: Running back Zac Stacy coughed up a costly fumble in Rams territory late in the third quarter, which led to a Philadelphia touchdown two plays later. Stacy did not return to the game, leaving many to wonder if he had been benched because of the turnover. Rams coach Jeff Fisher said after the game that isn’t the case and that Stacy suffered a calf injury on the play.
Looking in the mirror: There was plenty of blame to go around for the loss, but most Rams pointed the finger at themselves. Fisher and his players mentioned drops, penalties, busted coverages, protection mistakes and more as the self-inflicted wounds that ultimately led to the defeat. Fisher was particularly upset with the post-punt 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on linebacker Ray-Ray Armstrong.
October 5, 2014 at 7:38 pm in reply to: journalists do the Eagles game post-mortem…Wagoner, Thomas, etc. #9157RamBillParticipantESPN’s Jim Basquil and Merril Hoge break down the Eagles’ 34-28 win over the Rams.
http://www.rams-news.com/sunday-blitz-rams-eagles-recap-video/
October 4, 2014 at 7:06 pm in reply to: journalists setting up the Eagles game…including Thomas & etc. #9070RamBillParticipant
Stretch of Doom? Rams enter brutal part of schedule
• By Jim ThomasLast summer in World Cup soccer, the United States squad found itself in the so-called Group of Death with stiff competition in the form of Germany, Portugal and Ghana.
For the next eight weeks, the Rams’ football team finds itself in the Stretch of Doom. Starting on Sunday at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, the Rams (1-2) play eight consecutive games against teams that either made the playoffs, won at least 10 games — or both — in 2013.
The stretch includes defending Super Bowl champion Seattle, Super Bowl runner-up Denver and NFC powerhouse San Francisco (twice). Philadelphia won the NFC East, Kansas City and San Diego were wild-card teams and “poor little” Arizona went 10-6 but didn’t make the playoffs in the ultra-competitive NFC West.
Making matters tougher, five of those eight games are on the road, including three in a row: at KC (Oct. 26), at San Fran (Nov. 2), and at Bill Bidwill’s Place (Nov. 9).
The Rams haven’t won in San Francisco since 2007, are 2-5 in Arizona since 2007 and have lost their only two games at Arrowhead Stadium, aka the Sea of Red, by a combined score of 103-44 since the move to St. Louis.
Granted, what happened last season with a team often has little bearing on what transpires the following year. We get it. But the seven teams awaiting the Rams from now through Nov. 23 have shown little-to-no signs of falling off the gridiron map.
They have a combined record of 19-10 entering Sunday’s games. (We’re counting San Francisco’s 2-2 mark twice, because the Rams play them twice in this stretch: Oct. 13 in St. Louis and Nov. 2 out west.)
Philadelphia (3-1), Arizona (3-0) and San Diego (3-1) are division leaders; Denver (2-1) and Seattle (2-1) would be wild-card teams if the season ended today.
San Francisco and Kansas City (2-2) overcame sluggish starts to 2014 with rousing victories last weekend.
So what can be said to the Rams as they enter this unreal stretch except for: “Best of luck fellas”?
Obviously, neither coach Jeff Fisher nor any of his players can afford to think that way, or think big-picture. If they did, they might get a headache. The NFL is a week-to-week business, and this week it’s the Eagles in a noon (St. Louis time) kickoff.
“We have to focus on Philly, we really do,” Fisher said before the start of the practice week. “Yeah, when the schedule came out, you looked at it and you saw those consecutive weeks where there’s six, seven (games) against playoff teams, and Arizona who was 10-6 last year.”
But things can change.
A quarterback can go down. A defense can spring leaks. For example: Minnesota, minus running backs Adrian Peterson and quarterbacks Matt Cassel and Teddy Bridgewater (for now) looks a lot different than it did on opening day four weeks ago in St. Louis.
“You can’t dwell or spend too much time on the schedule,” Fisher said. “It really is a very simple process. It’s pay attention to who you’re playing next.”
That would be Chip Kelly’s Eagles. Four weeks ago, winning in the City of Brotherly Love seemed like an impossible task. And now? Not so much.
The Eagles play Sunday without two of their starting offensive linemen — two good ones at that in Pro Bowl guard Evan Mathis and ascending center Jason Kelce. Quarterback Nick Foles is battered and bruised. Although Foles hasn’t played poorly, he hasn’t been as effective as he was during his Pro Bowl campaign of 2013.
Deluxe running back LeSean McCoy has been stuck in neutral, averaging less than three yards a carry. On the other side of the ball, Philly’s 28th-ranked defense has had trouble stopping the run and the pass.
With young Austin Davis officially crowned as the starting quarterback, and Zac Stacy finally running like he did for much of last season, the Rams have growing confidence on offense. Davis is spreading the ball around, and the receiver corps — wideouts and tight ends — are making plays.
Now if only the’ defense would show up. Don’t be confused by the Rams’ ranking of 12th in total defense. The unit is 30th in run defense, is yielding 23.7 points a game and is last in the NFL with only one sack in three games.
In terms of the pass rush, defensive coordinator Gregg Williams said, “We had some opportunities this past week (against Dallas). We whiffed and just missed with some free rushers.”
Overall, Williams added: “We’ve got to do a good job on not giving up some of the big plays. A few of those plays you can’t explain why some smart guys like that would (miss assignments).
“But we’ve been real pleased with how hard they’ve been playing, and they’re getting better each and every week. We’ve just got to try to not have the unexpected one or two plays a game that causes points on the board.”
If there was ever a chance to get this pass rush going, this looks like the week. Foles is not very mobile and the Eagles’ offensive line is vulnerable in the middle.
The NFL is a matchup game, and that’s a matchup the Rams’ underachieving defensive line needs to exploit Sunday.
“Every week is an opportunity to make a big play,” defensive tackle Michael Brockers said. “With them being a little hurt, we should take advantage of it. When you have those matchups, you have to take advantage of them. And that’s what we have to do this week.”
Unless the Eagles change what they’ve been doing all along under Kelly, Foles will attempt several deep shots in the passing game. Deep shots general involve seven-step drops; they take a little more time to develop. In theory, the Rams should have some chances to unleash what has been a surprisingly ineffective pass rush.
If the Eagles can get McCoy on track, it’s an entirely different dynamic because then Philadelphia can get its play-action game going and keep the Rams off-balance.
But McCoy is struggling to the point of frustration, with only 39 yards rushing in 29 carries over the last two games.
“He’s frustrated now, and let’s keep him that way,” Brockers said.
October 4, 2014 at 7:00 pm in reply to: journalists setting up the Eagles game…including Thomas & etc. #9066RamBillParticipant7 Things to Watch: Rams vs. Eagles
• By Jim ThomasFACING FOLES
Eagles QB Nick Foles was a surprise sensation last season, throwing 27 TD passes with only two interceptions in place of an injured Michael Vick. His 119.2 passer rating at season’s end was the third-highest in NFL history. Foles opened this season with three straight 300-yard passing games, but ran into a brick wall otherwise known as the San Francisco defense last week. Although he wasn’t listed on the Eagles’ injury report this week, Foles has had issues with a sore left shoulder, and matters weren’t helped when he absorbed several hard shots from the 49ers. Even though it’s his non-throwing shoulder, some in Philly are wondering if it hasn’t affected his accuracy. He’s 29th in the NFL in completion percentage (57.8) and has already thrown four interceptions. The league’s best deep passer a year ago in terms of passer rating (124.0) on throws of 20 yards-plus, Foles completed only one of 13 deep balls against San Fran, including two INTs.
WHERE’S MCCOY?
Teams have been able to bear down on Foles because the Eagles have been so one-dimensional on offense. LeSean McCoy, a two-time Pro Bowler and the NFL’s leading rusher last season — with a franchise-record 1,607 yards — just can’t get it going so far this season. A week after gaining 22 yards in 19 carries against Washington, he was held to 17 yards in 10 carries last week in San Francisco.All in all it’s made this the worst four-game stretch in his career. He’s averaging a mere 2.7 yards a carry, barely more than half his 5.1 average for 2013. Of his 70 carries this season, 49 have gone for 2 yards or less. McCoy has had only one run longer than 5 yards over his past 9 quarters. Why has he been so ineffective? Is he injured? Is it the Eagles’ depleted offensive line? One thing’s for certain. McCoy must be excited about the opportunity to face the Rams’ 30th-ranked run defense, which has allowed a 100-yard rusher in all three games.
GOING DEEP
Although it hasn’t worked well this season, the Eagles love to stretch defenses by going deep. According to Pro Football Focus, Philly already has thrown 39 passes of 20 yards or more this season, which is tops in the NFL. Think the Eagles noticed the Rams’ two long pass interference penalties, or Dez Bryant’s 68-yard TD catch, in the Dallas game?
LIFE AFTER DESEAN
With DeSean Jackson now in Washington, St. Louisan Jeremy Maclin has made the most of the opportunity to be the Eagles’ No. 1 WR. He has deep speed, good hands and is on pace for his first 1,000-yard season. Riley Cooper is averaging only 8.3 yards a catch, less than half his 17.8 average in 2013. Rookie Jordan Matthews is a big slot receiver.
UP FRONT
The Eagles were minus three offensive line starters last week against the 49ers and it showed. Coach Chip Kelly conceded that the Eagles: “got whuppped up front.” RT Lane Johnson, the No. 4 pick in the 2013 draft, returns from an NFL drug suspension against the Rams. But Pro Bowl OG Evan Mathis (knee), and C Jason Kelce (sports hernia) remain sidelined.
HELLO, PAT
Pat Shurmur, the Rams’ offensive coordinator for two seasons (2009-2010) under coach Steve Spagnuolo, has the same duties for Kelly in Philadelphia after spending two seasons as head coach in Cleveland. Make no mistake, Kelly calls the plays but Shurmur has mixed elements of the West Coast passing game into Kelly’s run-heavy, up-tempo spread scheme.
SPECIAL CHALLENGE
In just four games, Philly’s special- teams unit has returned a punt and kickoff for a touchdown, and blocked a punt and a field goal. Former Mizzou star Brad Smith fell on the blocked punt for a TD at San Francisco. Chris Polk leads the NFL in kickoff returns, with a 40.4-yard average; Darren Sproles is second in punt returns, with a 15.4-yard average.
October 4, 2014 at 2:33 pm in reply to: player vids: Stacy, Laurinaitis, McCleod…& best of "wired" including Quick #9038RamBillParticipantCasey Phillips chats with safety Rodney McLeod. McLeod: “Conditioning shouldn’t be an issue for us on Sunday.”
http://www.rams-news.com/one-on-one-with-rams-safety-rodney-mcleod-video/
October 4, 2014 at 9:39 am in reply to: player vids: Stacy, Laurinaitis, McCleod…& best of "wired" including Quick #9025RamBillParticipantCheck out the best of Wired Wednesday including features from Zac Stacy, James Laurinaitis and Brian Quick. (5:43)
http://www.rams-news.com/best-of-wired-up-stacy-laurinaitis-and-quick-video/
RamBillParticipantDefensive coordinator Gregg Williams discusses the upcoming Week 5 game against the Philadelphia Eagles. Part 2
http://www.rams-news.com/gregg-williams-ive-got-a-lot-of-respect-for-chip-video/
October 4, 2014 at 12:53 am in reply to: journalists setting up the Eagles game…including Thomas & etc. #9019RamBillParticipantRams’ defense needs higher gear
• By Jim ThomasA week ago in preparing for Philadelphia’s offense, San Francisco defensive coordinator Vic Fangio had the 49ers’ scout team rotate wide receivers and running backs after every play. As soon as the previous play was completed, the next set of backs and receivers were lining up, according to the Oakland Tribune.
In addition, Fangio purposely sent calls in late to his defense on the practice field, to simulate the kind of confusion that Philly’s up-tempo, no-huddle offense can cause.
This week at Rams Park, the Rams’ scout team offense ran a play about every 20 seconds, which is quick, leaving the starting defense with little time to catch its breath and get lined up properly.
Such is life when trying to defend the Eagles. It’s not just the plays they run, it’s how quickly they run them.
Second-year Eagles coach Chip Kelly brought a version of his fast-break offense from Oregon, and it worked like a charm in 2013 when Philly set franchise single-season records for points, total yards, touchdowns and passing yards.
The quick pace gets defenses on their heels, tires them out and can lead to busted plays and missed assignments.
“You prepare for the tempo,” linebacker James Laurinaitis said. “It stresses your communication. You have to be good with hand signals. You have to change hand signals midgame because you don’t want them to get a bead on what you’re doing. But at the end of the day, you have to have great eyes vs. this group.”
Great eyes?
“You have to discipline your eyes and keep ’em in the right place,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said. “You can’t get distracted by a lot of the subtle things that they do offensively. That’s what they’re trying to do is to get you to go someplace else with your eyes.
“When you do that, you’re not seeing what you’re supposed to see. Namely, the wide receiver running by you, or the running back cutting back against the grain. That’s how the Eagles can create creases at the line of scrimmage, or seams in the coverage.”
For a still-young Rams defense that has experienced occasional trouble staying assignment-sound against more conventional offenses, Philadelphia’s approach is cause for concern. More so than any other week, sound preparation has been key for the Rams.
On film, Laurinaitis said the Eagles run a lot of the same plays, or similar plays. And if they’re successful with something, they’ll run it over and over until you stop it. Kind of an old-school style but with a modern approach. What can cause confusion, particularly in the high-tempo environment, is that the Eagles may run that same play but with different personnel, alignments or motion.
If you get caught looking at that window dressing and think something different is coming, that’s when you get gashed with a big play.
“Those are things that have hurt us, quite frankly, in the first three games,” Laurinaitis said. “There’s been great defense and then there’s six plays, seven plays where we have bad eyes — and boom, it’s a big play.”
That puts focus, discipline and communication at a premium Sunday at Lincoln Financial Field.
“The last thing we can have is bad communication, and just give them free plays,” Laurinaitis said. “They’re gonna make plays on their own, but you give them free plays, you’re already behind the eight-ball.”
The communication process from play to play goes from sideline to middle linebacker. Once Laurinaitis gets the play, he must repeat it to everyone else on defense and make sure they get lined up properly. Obviously, when facing a quick-tempo offense such as Philadelphia, all of that must be done quickly and without benefit of a huddle.
“My lungs will be tested,” Lauriniaitis said. “It’s a different beast when you’re able to huddle up, talk to your guys.”
That’s where the hand signals come into play, as well as code words.
While at Southern Cal in college, Rams safety T.J. McDonald played against this style when Kelly was coaching Oregon in the Pacific-12 Conference.
“It’s fast,” McDonald said. “They’ve got different levels of speed. In college, they would go fast, and there would be some plays they’d go even faster. It’s definitely high-tempo, so the quicker you can get (them) off the field, the better.”
Getting lined up right is tough, McDonald said, only “if you make it tough.” It can be a simple as listening to the play call and following the plan.
One other by-product of the Eagles’ up-tempo style is that it makes substitutions difficult. NFL rules give the defense time to sub if the offense sends in different personnel, but you’ve still got to be able to do so quickly. And if the defense wants to send in different personnel on its own — without the offense doing so — that’s all but impossible against this style of offense.
Rams defensive coordinator Gregg Williams said he has 19 separate personnel packages based on what the opposition is doing, maximizing his players’ individual strengths, and taking into account injury situations.
But that will have to be limited to some degree Sunday against the Eagles.
“When you have package limitations as far as subbing on and off the field, really what you end up doing is you simplify your game (plan) and we have,” Williams said.
RamBillParticipantDefensive coordinator Gregg Williams discusses the upcoming Week 5 game against the Philadelphia Eagles.
http://www.rams-news.com/gregg-williams-were-getting-better-each-week-video/
RamBillParticipantHead coach Jeff Fisher discusses the upcoming Week 5 game against the Philadelphia Eagles. Fisher: “From a pass attempts standpoint, we’re either first or however you look at it, least in amount of pass attempts in the league. So, when people start throwing the ball, we’ll start hitting the quarterback.”
http://www.rams-news.com/fisher-when-people-start-throwing-the-ball-well-start-hitting-the-qb-video/
October 3, 2014 at 7:55 pm in reply to: journalists setting up the Eagles game…including Thomas & etc. #9011RamBillParticipantDeep ball an important element for Rams, Eagles
By Nick Wagonerhttp://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/12259/deep-ball-an-important-element-for-rams-eagles
EARTH CITY, Mo. — The rushing attacks of the St. Louis Rams and Philadelphia Eagles are supposed to be the foundation for what both teams want to do offensively.
When the teams meet on Sunday afternoon, there’s little doubt that the running game will play a major role in the outcome. But the numbers for both teams show that this one could really come down to which team is able to hit more big plays down the field in the passing game.
Through three games, the Rams have not been shy about taking their shots, especially with Austin Davis at quarterback. Davis leads all quarterbacks with a 72.3 percent completion rate but has also had his share of success throwing deep. He’s attempted 20 passes traveling 15-plus yards in the air and hit on 12 of them, a 60 percent completion rate which also ranks No. 1 in the league. His quarterback rating of 99.7 on such throws is tied for third in the NFL.
Not many young quarterbacks trying to get their feet wet in the NFL would be so willing to go deep early, but Davis apparently has different wiring.
“We’ve always thought he threw the ball well down the field,” offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer said. “He’s as comfortable as I’ve ever been around a guy that gets thrown into that situation. He hasn’t blinked from day one and again, I think this just speaks to the confidence we have in him. I think he knows the group trusts him and believes in him but he hasn’t hesitated or blinked at one time from the moment he went in and had to play in the first game. I think that’s a tribute to him.”
Philadelphia has also been susceptible to the deep pass. The Eagles have allowed opponents to complete 12-of-25 passes traveling 15-plus yards in the air for 389 yards and two touchdowns. Opponents have a QBR of 98.4 on those attempts, which ranks 25th in the league.
On the other side, there’s no team in the league that likes throwing the deep ball more than the Eagles and quarterback Nick Foles. His 52 pass attempts on throws 15 or more yards down the field are clearly the most in the league. Much of those throws come off of play-action passes, but just because Foles and the Eagles like to throw deep doesn’t mean they are always successful.
On throws of 15-plus yards, Foles is 16-of-52 for 409 yards with three touchdowns and three interceptions for a QB rating of 74.0, which is 24th in the league. Last week, Foles attempted 10 passes traveling 20 or more yards downfield, did not connect on a single one and threw a pair of interceptions. Since ESPN Stats & Info began tracking such things in 2006, that’s the most attempts without a completion in a game.
But the hit-or-miss nature of those passes doesn’t mean the Rams expect the Eagles to stop throwing deep.
“This is the biggest vertical passing game that we’ve faced all season so for us, just making sure we are staying on top, getting pressure on the quarterback, getting him off his spot and that all goes in hand with each other,” safety T.J. McDonald said. “That’s the plan.”
The deep passing game hasn’t been something the Rams have seen much of in the first three games. In a clear effort to negate the Rams’ pass rush, opponents have tried just nine passes 15 or more yards in the air, the fewest such attempts in the league. The Cowboys hit one for a 68-yard touchdown in Week 3 game but overall, opponents are 5-of-9 against the Rams in those situations.
October 3, 2014 at 4:37 pm in reply to: player vids: Stacy, Laurinaitis, McCleod…& best of "wired" including Quick #9005RamBillParticipantRams LB James Laurinaitis on fixing what’s been a disappointing defensive performance so far for the team. He talks with Steve Savard.
http://www.rams-news.com/james-laurinaitis-on-rams-defense-we-have-to-grow-up-video/
RamBillParticipantBest, worst offensive line groups
By Christopher Harris
ESPN.comDeMarco Murray is crushing it. He’s the No. 1 running back in fantasy and the current runaway leader in Value-Based Drafting ranks, which easily makes him fantasy’s MVP at the quarter mark. I understand how much risk he totes around with him — he’s missed 11 games in three NFL seasons and knee, ankle and wrist injuries have regularly made him questionable — but if I drafted him in August I’m not selling high. His workload may eventually get him, but at this point the reward justifies the risk.
While Murray is a talented player — big and fast with good hands — there’s something else going on with the Dallas Cowboys, too. That offensive line is incredible.
Theoretically, we all know how much an O-line means to a RB, but this first month has been an object lesson in the restorative and punitive powers of run blocking. Talented rushers have seen their production undercut by poor lines, and marginal RBs have been boosted by their front lines getting a spectacular push. So I think it’s a worthwhile exercise to evaluate which units are doing their jobs well, and which have been poor.
Is there a metric that can tell you for certain how an offensive line is playing? Some folks believe in yards before contact (YBC), under the theory that if you’re getting good push, your RB makes it further down the field before a defender can touch him:
Highest Avg. Yds Before Contact, This Season
Avg. YBC
Lamar Miller, MIA 3.98
Justin Forsett, BAL 3.86
Khiry Robinson, NO 3.83
Isaiah Crowell, CLE 3.63
Knowshon Moreno, MIA 3.52
Andre Ellington, ARI 3.41
Shane Vereen, NE 3.39
DeMarco Murray, DAL 3.30
Knile Davis, KC 3.23
Le’Veon Bell, PIT 3.18I think there’s some value to this number. Seeing both Miami Dolphins RBs on this list makes you believe the team has come a long way from last year’s incompetent and drama-filled line, and seeing a Baltimore Ravens RB here jibes with my sense that ridding themselves of Michael Oher at right tackle (in favor of mauling second-year former tight end Rick Wagner) was one of the smartest moves the Ravens could’ve made. But YBC doesn’t account for opponent, run direction, play type or other holistic factors that go into offensive line play. It’s a guiding stat, but not one I want to build my evaluations around.
No, like so many things in the NFL, gauging line play requires film review. As much as we want football to be like baseball — where metrics are incredibly helpful, because the pitcher-batter interaction is consistent and so oft-repeated — most NFL evaluations can’t be boiled down to numbers. There are just too many variables. I also should add that I’m not formally trained in breaking down an individual lineman’s tape. There literally are camps to learn about these things, and I haven’t attended them. But I watch every game, often multiple times, so I do have a pretty good sense of how lines are blocking as units. Here’s how I see the best and worst through four weeks.
Three up
1. Dallas Cowboys: Maybe Murray doesn’t lead the league in YBC, but his rushing lanes are often massive. This is a crushing, grinding, power-blocking scheme led by Tyron Smith, who is perhaps the best left tackle in the league. But each man across this line has pancaked defenders multiple times, and in rewatching Cowboys tape I realize how precise and powerful they are.
On the play below against the New Orleans Saints, Murray isn’t making an en vogue zone run; he’s patiently setting up Smith and left guard Ronald Leary as they wall off defenders. Meanwhile, center Travis Frederick gets to the second level and blocks a linebacker, right guard Zack Martin stonewalls a defensive tackle, and right tackle Doug Free delays weakside defensive help:
If we take a snapshot of the exact same moment from a different angle, we get an appreciation for how devastating this is. Smith and Leary have kicked out and in, respectively, and have muscled their defenders away so Murray’s lane is clear as day. And the fact that Frederick has gotten upfield makes this a touchdown: Murray will see Frederick shoving Curtis Lofton left, and make a simple cutback to score:
By my accounting, no line is currently doing this better than the Cowboys’. They may have some pass-blocking deficiencies (they’ve allowed eight sacks), but they are Murray’s best friends.
2. Cincinnati Bengals: There aren’t any Bengals on the YBC list above, but Giovani Bernard and Jeremy Hill are benefiting from a line with longevity: Only rookie center Russell Bodine hasn’t been a starter here for multiple years, though right guard Kevin Zeitler is currently out with a calf injury. Andy Dalton has yet to be sacked in three games and has been pressured on a league-low 10.5 percent of his dropbacks, which is somewhat tangible statistical evidence of quality. But these guys are also mashers in the run game.
Folks remember Andre Smith as a problem child from “Hard Knocks” a few years ago, but he has morphed into a mean dude when Bernard runs his way. Smith was a handful in Week 2 (against an admittedly poor Atlanta Falcons defensive front), getting to the second level and tossing around linebackers. It strikes me that while pretty much any O-line would be a good fit for someone as talented as Bernard, this group is also well suited for Hill’s pile-driving style: They don’t do a ton of group east-west finesse stuff (though their guards do pull well individually), but rather fire out hard, which works well with Hill’s decisive attack.
3. St. Louis Rams: They’ve played only three games and Zac Stacy isn’t yet setting the world ablaze, but I’m impressed by what I’ve seen. I’m sure this is partly because Stacy himself is such a load, but you rarely see him swarmed under behind the line of scrimmage, and that’s at least partly a tribute to the O-line.
You don’t have to watch much tape before you figure out the Rams are best when they’re running left, behind tackle Jake Long and guard Rodger Saffold. Long has been a premier “inside seal” tackle for years, allowing his RBs to bounce out left and get around the edge; while Stacy isn’t a home run hitter, he has surprising lateral agility for a 224-pound guy. This running game — and this team — may go as far as preseason third-string quarterback Austin Davis can take them by keeping defenses honest, but seeing solid O-line play still has me optimistic on Stacy.
Three down
1. Philadelphia Eagles: This is no surprise, and no reflection on Chip Kelly. This line has been wrecked by injuries, suspensions and ejections. LeSean McCoy has been a victim here; his beloved outside zone-read plays have essentially been “unrunnable,” as his substitute linemen haven’t been able to prevent defenders from getting in front of Shady as he stretches east/west, and haven’t been able to hold the backside to allow McCoy to cut back:
One key principle of a zone play like this one is that once a lineman wins or finds himself uncovered, he sprints toward the sideline, creating a wall behind which McCoy can cut back. The Eagles are so thin up front that Brent Celek actually has to play right tackle here, but he’s not the problem. The key breakdowns are guards Matt Tobin and Dennis Kelly. Tobin gets an initial push right but stumbles before he can get to linebacker Michael Wilhoite, and Wilhoite’s presence doesn’t allow McCoy to cut back. Kelly has a clear path to Patrick Willis, but falls down before he can get there, and Willis literally can be seen in this freeze frame stepping over Kelly’s prostrate body. This is a total mess, and McCoy gains zero.
Of course, neither Tobin nor Kelly is supposed to be playing, nor is center David Molk. Fortunately, right tackle Lane Johnson returns from suspension this week, meaning at least he and LT Jason Peters are accounted for; around Week 10, regular center Jason Kelce is also supposed to be ready to come back from his sports hernia surgery. In other words, there’s a built-in excuse here, and things could get better. Right now, though, it’s ugly.
2. Jacksonville Jaguars: This is piling on after the Jags led last week’s list of the NFL’s worst cornerback trios, but it’s the truth. Toby Gerhart may not be a dynamic player, but when you’re met in the backfield as frequently as he is, there’s not much you can do. Jacksonville already released starting right tackle Cameron Bradfield, and former No. 2 overall pick Luke Joeckel has been shaky in pass protection at left tackle. Click through all of Gerhart’s carries in ’14 and it’s a litany of mistakes and turnstile impersonations; I also worry about Blake Bortles’ longevity. Massive Austin Pasztor will return from injury in the next month and man the right side, but if there’s a reason to be skeptical Gerhart will bounce back and be a fantasy factor, you’re looking at it.
3. Carolina Panthers: This is a team that lost the entire left side of its offensive line to retirement this winter, and it shows. Byron Bell is blatantly overmatched at left tackle (heck, he wasn’t that great at right tackle last year); he and left guard Amini Silatolu are responsible for some of the biggest left-side cave-ins I’ve seen on tape this year. To my eyes, there’s simply precious little forward push up and down this O-line, as Cam Newton and the various RBs are forced to dodge defenders so early in a play that they need to weave through traffic just to get back to the line. A once-proud group now can’t convert third-and-short, which makes you wonder whether Newton will be a fantasy star even when his ribs allow him to run more.
October 3, 2014 at 1:06 pm in reply to: journalists setting up the Eagles game…including Thomas & etc. #8982RamBillParticipantDefending Eagles’ up-tempo offense is all in the eyes
By Nick WagonerEARTH CITY, Mo. — St. Louis Rams safety T.J. McDonald knows all about a Chip Kelly offense. He found out the hard way.
As a USC senior in 2012, McDonald was a part of a Trojans’ defense that was scorched by Kelly’s high-octane offense to the tune of 62 points and 730 yards of total offense in a 62-51 Ducks’ win. The Trojans edged Oregon in 2011, but McDonald’s team was on the wrong end of a 53-32 loss in 2010 in which the Trojans surrendered 599 yards of total offense.
Those numbers are enough to cause McDonald some nightmares this week as the Rams prepare to face Kelly’s Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday. That preparation isn’t easy and there are many layers, but McDonald says there is one thing that stands above the rest when getting ready for Kelly’s fast break offense.
“I could give you 150 ways to prepare for it, but once you get into the game, it’s a different feeling,” McDonald said. “The biggest thing is to have your eyes up. That’s the thing we are stressing all this week is making sure your eyes are right and they run a lot of similar plays to each other, so just don’t let your eyes fool you.”
The Eagles’ offense isn’t necessarily revolutionizing football but it is bringing a new look to the NFL. With an emphasis on tempo — Kelly prefers to run as many plays as possible in a game — the Eagles intend to create a dizzying combination of confusion, tired legs and big plays.
In the Rams’ locker room this week, all of those things have been discussed, but nothing has surpassed the importance of dotting the eyes.
Much of what the Eagles do is the same from play to play, though it comes out of different formations and personnel packages. On a given drive, Kelly and offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur won’t hesitate to call the same zone-read repeatedly knowing that the defense won’t have enough time to correct a weakness in the middle of the series. Many of those runs are used to help set up something big down the field on play-action passes.
Retaining gap discipline is even more important against the Eagles’ running game because of running back LeSean McCoy’s knack for freelancing when holes close.
Middle linebacker James Laurinaitis offered the best explanation of the importance of eyes.
“It seems like they’re running the same stuff over and over, but they just do it really well,” Laurinaitis said. “What they count on you doing is, they count on one play you getting your eyes out of sorts and then bam, there’s a big play. And they’re successful at it. … And those are things that have hurt us in the first three games, quite frankly. There’s been great defense then six plays, seven plays where we have bad eyes and then boom, it’s a big play. So we’ve just been stressing, if you have great eyes your technique is going to follow that, you’re going to have great feet, you’re going to have great hands, everything will follow it, but let’s communicate, have great eyes and focus on what your job is. That’s really what we’ve been stressing all week, and they challenge you on that because they’ll find them, they’ll find the open guys.”
In order to work on all of those things this week, the Rams’ scout team is doing all it can to simulate the Eagles’ tempo. It’s one thing to have your head up and on a swivel early in the game, but after the Eagles run play after play, it can quickly catch up to teams in the second half. That is why the Eagles had some slow starts in their first three games, but went on to outscore opponents 74-24 in the second half of those victories.
The scout team offense has attempted to run an offensive play every 20 seconds in practice, forcing the defense to handle substitutions accordingly and Laurinaitis to ensure that his defensive teammates are lined up properly and ready to go at the snap without having their heads down searching for air.
Because of the tempo, the Eagles make it hard to get any sort of substitution pattern going for the defense. That means the onus falls on Laurinaitis and the defense to be aware and ready to go when they do want to make subs and to communicate flawlessly before every snap. If that doesn’t happen, those big plays can come in bunches.
“They’re high-tempo from start to finish, complete- incomplete, run plays, penalties they’re going,” coach Jeff Fisher said. “It’s about our ability on defense to communicate, to disguise looks, to stop the run, to challenge receivers. It’s a wide open offense, and I can appreciate the job Nick (Foles) has done in that offense. You can appreciate how this team in one year made the playoffs, so it’s quite a challenge for us.”
Whether a Rams defense that has struggled with less unique offenses so far this season is up to the challenge remains a question. On Sunday, seeing will be believing.
RamBillParticipantOn this episode of Football Friday, Post-Dispatch columnist Bryan Burwell & Rams beat writer Jim Thomas discuss the decision of naming Austin Davis the starting QB & its impact on the Rams squad. They also talk about facing the Eagles.
http://www.rams-news.com/jt-burwells-football-friday-davis-named-starter-video/
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