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  • in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 9/1 – 9/4 #152027
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    from https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5727310/2024/09/02/nfl-teams-rumors-russell-wilson-skepticism-davante-adams-trades/?campaign=5888993&source=dailyemail&userId=603890

    Los Angeles Rams: Quarterback Matthew Stafford’s handle on the offense is admired in the building. This might be a small example, but he made a slight adjustment with a play call during one practice this summer that had the entire offense gushing on the sideline, including coaches and players who were listening on the headsets. There’s so much respect around the league for Stafford and head coach Sean McVay that the Rams are expected to be NFC contenders once again.

    in reply to: tweets…around the league (starting 8/6) #152025
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    MLFootball@_MLFootball
    BREAKING: 11x Pro Bowl tackle Trent Williams is reportedly a serious threat to MISS GAMES this season, ESPN reports. Williams is extremely unhappy about how the contract negotiations have gone, as he continues to hold out.
    in reply to: high time we had a gender thread #152022
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    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 9/1 – 9/4 #152020
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    NFL Stats@NFL_Stats
    Most expensive defenses in 2024:

    #Steelers – $145.8M
    #Packers – $124.5M
    #Bears – $116.0M
    #Falcons – $115.8M
    #Chargers – $115.6M

    Cheapest:

    #Rams – $44.1M
    #Chiefs – $75.1M
    #Lions – $78.3M
    #Eagles – $79.4M
    #Broncos – $79.7M

    Most expensive offenses in 2024:

    #Rams – $176.4M
    #Chiefs – $153.9M
    #Cowboys – $137.0M
    #Colts – $135.9M
    #Giants – $133.9M

    Cheapest:

    #Steelers – $66.5M
    #Packers – $73.0M
    #Chargers – $78.0M
    #Buccaneers – $79.7M
    #Titans – $81.7M

    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 9/1 – 9/4 #152018
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    Rams Bros.@RamsBrothers
    On the surface, Ethan Evans’ average distance on punts is down. But his hang time and the way he’s hitting each punt is different this year. Isaac [a fan who analyze punting] describes it as a “banana ball”, and it’s REALLY difficult for returners to handle. Keep your eyes on this, could be a huge advantage for the Rams’ special teams unit this season.

     

    in reply to: tweets…around the league (starting 8/6) #152017
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    This afternoon, there was an attempted robbery in Union Square involving San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Ricky Pearsall and he was shot.

    Ed Werder@WerderEdESPN
    The 49ers say their first-round pick was shot in the chest.
    in reply to: “analyzing Rams offense” thread #152013
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    zn wrote: ..QB.. but WS just has more physical gifts

    Typo! Fixed via edit. I am the tpyo king.

    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 8/28 – 8/30 #152005
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    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 8/28 – 8/30 #152004
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    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 8/28 – 8/30 #152003
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    in reply to: setting up Rams at Lions, 9/8 at 8:20 et 5:20 pt #152001
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    Lions Are ‘Damn Good’ Thanks to Jared Goff’s Revival In Detroit
    But even if Detroit should win the Super Bowl, the former Rams quarterback will still be questioned, debated, doubted and the rest.

    Greg Bishop

    https://www.si.com/nfl/lions-are-damn-good-thanks-to-jared-goff-detroit-revival

    When the Detroit Lions traded Matthew Stafford in 2021, the quarterback they received in return (along with draft picks) seemed like an afterthought in a wider deal. To many, maybe. But not to him.

    Jared Goff saw a team that wanted him, a general manager he was already familiar with and a coach among the easiest in sports to line up alongside for an Anchorman-style brawl.

    Both his new franchise and the city it called home had fallen into disrepair. Both had also, generally, been mischaracterized, with depictions that were too general, overly harsh and lacking context. A franchise and a city that were similar to … him.

    Goff, per an interview this summer and a conversation with his private quarterbacks coach, Adam Dedeaux, began his own Detroit rebirth by simplifying his approach. In later seasons with the Los Angeles Rams, the team that drafted him with the No. 1 pick in 2016, Goff’s growth had created unintended consequences. He sometimes felt pressure and made throws he shouldn’t have when anxiety began to amplify.

    So the idea that first season in Detroit: Go back to the stuff Goff always did well on football fields, in order to build toward more creative play. Goff didn’t expect this back-to-school development, nor the trade, nor Detroit, nor three wins over the course of an entire season, his first in the Motor City. But he embraced it because he always embraces everything. He could see this experiment in building football culture beginning to take shape.

    That coach, Dan Campbell, had hired Ben Johnson to coach tight ends through that initial 2021 season. Halfway through it, though, he promoted Johnson to offensive coordinator. Johnson and Goff clicked, right away.

    In 2022, his second season in Detroit and first full year with Johnson as his OC, Goff made the Pro Bowl. His interception tally remained in single digits. His completion percentage perpetually hovered in the mid-60s, far above all but his final season with the Rams. A simpler, smarter game had yielded more than the intended results. Now, Goff was adding mastery—of the system and how he played within it, or, if we must, managed games (and, to be clear, quite well)—while eyeing ways both could be enhanced.

    “The first year I worked with him, I said he was going to win Super Bowls,” says Adam Dedeaux, Goff’s QB coach and mentor to many a star quarterback. “The moment’s never too big. He ran into a buzzsaw in Bill Belichick [and the Patriots, who beat the Rams 13–3 in Super Bowl LIII]. But it wasn’t that the moment was too big.”

    Before last season, Goff and Dedeaux began to shift their focus. Goff had the Lions’ offense down. He understood his role, his teammates’ roles and how each could be optimized. He completed a career-high 67.3% of his attempts, threw for 4,575 yards, tossed 30 touchdowns compared to 12 interceptions, and led the Lions—Detroit!—back to the playoffs, winning two games there. But those parts, each awesome, aren’t what stick with him.

    The conference championship game loss at San Francisco still stung back in June. It seemed fair to wonder if Goff had perspective despite the Lions’ second-half collapse, if he and Campbell shared a moment that evening to recognize how far they’d come, together. Goff might as well have been told that Eminem doesn’t rank among history’s best rap artists. His face said what his mouth made far more diplomatic. Face said: worst question in the history of the world. Mouth said: “No, because we didn’t win.”

    Come on! What a season Goff and the Lions put together. The end of so many narratives. The start of so many more. Pressed for why he couldn’t find those notions in the moment, his thinking becomes clearer. It starts with a simple fact. They didn’t win. Right, he’s told, but while every team in football says their goal in every season is to win the Super Bowl, there are maybe six or eight teams in any one season that can say that with a straight face and a realistic chance. “Yeah, and we were certainly one of them,” he says, with a light scoff that perhaps was more of a throat-clearing for what came next.

    “Last year, what bothered me, at times, was people had this notion that we were happy to be there, and we certainly weren’t [that],” he says. “The Cinderella-story-type things. And it’s like, No, we’re just damn good.”

    Asked to confirm or add to Goff’s sentiments, Campbell’s eyes all but twinkle from inside that break-glass-in-case look of his. “I love it, I absolutely love it, and he’s absolutely right,” the coach gushes. “Yeah, there is no moment, man. You’re dejected. And you’re off. And it hurts.”

    One week or so after the Super Bowl ended in another Kansas City Chiefs title, Goff was back at individual practices, even earlier than usual. Months later, Detroit signed him to a massive extension—four years, potentially worth over $200 million, $170 million of that guaranteed. Goff knows that he must earn it, just not in the way most might think is obvious. He wants to earn another playoff run, another Super Bowl appearance and, this time, a championship.

    Anyone who didn’t know that—and, to be clear, all probably did—was reminded of the work ahead early into Detroit’s voluntary OTAs this spring. After one terrible offensive practice, Campbell gathered the offense and made clear what already should have been the clearest thing in the world: His standards hadn’t dropped. They never would. The offense would, at minimum, need to rise and meet that baseline. Immediately. “Guys, great offenses in this league don’t do that,” Campbell boomed.

    Detroit’s did rise, did meet their coach’s exacting standard, the very next practice. Which is both a small thing and not a small thing at all. Not when the Super Bowl is the only goal.

    How often does Goff think about that? Every day, he says.

    Goff only intensified preparations for next season. Now better in all areas of technique, with three more seasons of experience, higher accuracy and far fewer too-risky throws, he long ago realized how fortunate he was. Fortunate, yes, to be traded to the Lions. “The opportunity I had, yeah, and how lucky I was to get a chance to be in a place that hasn’t won, has been downtrodden, beaten down, told it’s not good enough,” he says.

    To win a Super Bowl, now, in this place, after everything, would present the ultimate case for patience in pro football. “There’ll be no better, sweet feeling,” he says, adding the obligatory disclaimer. “But no one expects it to be easy.”

    Goff, Dedeaux argues, already boasts an objective résumé that far outpaces his acclaim outside team headquarters. He has won shootouts against the “best” quarterbacks of his era. He has won playoff games—and, now, won them in Detroit. He’s still not, according to Dedeaux or a basic internet search, regarded as a candidate for a mythical status that would have been laughed away three years ago. Still not seen, by most, as a top-five NFL quarterback.

    Other than taking more calculated, still risky chances, the bulk of their time together this offseason focused on fine-tuning everything they’ve built. It would, Goff says, be too boring and too granular to explain. Like a doctoral degree in quarterback play, he says. More efficiency overall. Smaller technical corrections. Introducing new, subtle tactics to maneuver defenders, rather than react to them. Considering details that were considered too finite in previous offseasons. Then making some throws he decided not to attempt in recent seasons; only now, stepping into each with renewed confidence and trust in his own ability.

    That Johnson, his coordinator, didn’t leave to become a head coach elsewhere—another obligatory disclaimer: yet—helps tremendously. A second, consistent receiver option beyond star wideout Amon-Ra St. Brown, would help. But Dedeaux believes—he’s not alone—that Goff can carry the Lions through stretches of games and the overall season.

    Sometimes, they have “candid conversations” about the quarterback market and how it’s changing, ballooning, based on potential and protecting assets as much as what happens on the field. Goff was once the potential guy. Now, he’s a fiercely debated piece in that up-up-up landscape for quarterback compensation. Neither Goff nor any of his coaches begrudge any quarterbacks who perpetually present immense talent, endless potential, and occasionally, when everything and everyone around them aligns, fashion a special season. Goff is not those players, and that’s a good thing, the evidence clear through no more than a quick glance at his statistics, advanced metrics or otherwise.

    “I get where some people are super flashy, and Jared has not been flashy,” Dedeaux says. “He’s been solid. He’s been dependable, repeatable. He executes. He stays healthy. He’s present. It matters to him, to be in the building. He shows up. Does the little things. Easy to coach. And only getting better.”

    Is Goff—cue the laugh track no longer—a top-five candidate, worthy of more widespread consideration for his talents? Dedeaux answers with a question of his own: Is he going to be as flashy as a Patrick Mahomes or a Josh Allen or a Lamar Jackson? Well, no. “But the accumulation of what he does certainly warrants” his standing near there, if not there-there.

    So he plans to, yet again. Goff insists that optics don’t matter, not to him, this QB with the laid-back personality of a La-Z-Boy. Dedeaux will not say they’re irrelevant. In some, significant ways, they do matter. What he wants is for Goff to be considered more fairly, for his optics to come from what he has already accomplished. How he changed his voice and everyday routines to maximize his impact, to be heard; then, rebuilt his style of play; before starting on false narratives by not addressing them, directly, at all.

    Should Detroit win the upcoming Super Bowl, a potential NFL dynasty, starting like the Patriots did in a championship victory carved inside the Superdome in New Orleans, Goff will still be questioned, debated, doubted and the rest. Probably less than before. But totally celebrated? No. “I still don’t know if he’d ever get the credit he deserves,” Dedeaux says.

    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 8/28 – 8/30 #152000
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    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    This time last year for the Rams, Dotson was just landing in LA. Akers & Van were starters. Puka was on zero fantasy teams. We hadn’t met The Conductor or Agent0. DRob’s first target & the pistol formation were months away.
    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 8/28 – 8/30 #151999
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    From https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/8/30/24232528/rams-aaron-donald-jared-goff-trade-matthew-stafford-podcast?utm_campaign=socialflow&utm_medium=social&utm_content=turfshowtimes&utm_source=twitter

    Donald explained his take on why the Rams moved off of Goff just two years after handing him a 4-yr $134 mil extension.

    “Not saying that Jared Goff wasn’t that guy,” Donald said. ”I think he was just younger, and they weren’t willing to wait for the development process with him. They were more trying to win now.”

    “I think adding a veteran guy that had been around a long time, that had played with some great football players, played some great football a long time, bring him to a team with the pieces to get it done. That was a big help for us.”

    “Everything happened for a reason,” Donald said. “I think Jared Goff is in a great position right now where he’s playing some good football, becoming that veteran presence, becoming that household name, getting his team where it needs to be.”

    in reply to: who’s at center #151996
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    from what rodrigue is saying it seems like more about confidence in his ability to play lg than anything to do with a lack of confidence in his ability to play c.

    I don’t know if it even has anything to do with Avila, other than this. They need their left guard to run a lot, and Avila is healthy while Jackson is coming off of injuries. Maybe that’s it? (?)

    in reply to: who’s at center #151993
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    Rams Bros.@RamsBrothers
    Jonah Jackson has played every interior offensive line position at a high level throughout his collegiate and professional career. Avila dominated last year at LG and played the most snaps out of any player on the Rams’ roster. They’ll. Be. Fine.
    in reply to: cut downs, & the 53 + practice squad #151990
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    Los Angeles Rams@RamsNFL
    LA Rams Roster Moves:
    • Terminated (by Club) from Practice Squad RB Zach Evans
    me (at moi.com): I went back and used the strikeout feature to edit the posted list of practice squad players.
    in reply to: tweets…around the league (starting 8/6) #151987
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    That doesn’t “mean” anything, but it isn’t good. They don’t mention specifics, but just have noticed there isn’t the general bravado/chest-bumping/high-fiving stuff going on. FWIW.

    This is just an impression but it looked to me like their OL lost that game. I wonder if there’s blame and resentment going around about that.

    in reply to: tweets…around the league (starting 8/6) #151984
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    [quote] Zooey wrote: …Signing Williams is going to cost some other guys on the roster, though (next year). Bottom line is that the window is closing on this group, and a rebuild around Purdy is on the way. And they have a shaky OL heading into this season. For those of you who don’t know much about football, shaky OLs are not helpful.

    Yeah, they will be good as long as Lynch and Shan are running things, one would think, but their ‘elite’ status should end after this year.[/quote]

    One scenario to think about.

    They part ways with Williams. Possibly even this season, but most likely after the season.

    He’s then a free agent.

    Where does he end up? Hint hint.

    in reply to: cut downs, & the 53 + practice squad #151982
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    Rams actually have 78 players.

    53 on the 53.

    17 on the practice squad.

    6 on various injury lists.

    2 suspended for 2 games.

     

    in reply to: cut downs, & the 53 + practice squad #151980
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    Here is your 2024 Rams practice squad (for now): etc.

    from  https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/8/28/24230955/rams-2024-practice-squad-depth-chart-roster?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=socialflow&utm_content=turfshowtimes&utm_source=twitter

    Last September, the NFL announced that beginning in 2024, practice squads would expand to 17 players for all 32 teams, if one of those players is a qualifying international player. For the Rams, that is defensive tackle David Olajiga.

    in reply to: tweets…around the league (starting 8/6) #151979
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    shaky OLs are not helpful.

    I’ve heard that.

    Thanks for the report, it’s interesting to hear that stuff.

    in reply to: cut downs, & the 53 + practice squad #151976
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    Reserve/Injured

    Derion Kendrick
    Conor McDermott
    Tre Tomlinson

    Reserve/Injured; Designated for Return

    KT Leveston
    Larrell Murchison

    Reserve/Physically Unable to Perform

    Tyler Higbee

    in reply to: Jones on Trading Block? yep he was traded #151975
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    Felt Football@FeltFootball
    McVay’s reaction to the media yesterday screams to me that he felt like he was being pressured to say something he didn’t want to say…so there’s definitely more to the story than the company line. I will say…I don’t know much about the Falcons ILB situation, but I do find it interesting that Raheem wasn’t interested in adding Jones for next to nothing. That makes me go hmmmm.
    in reply to: cut downs, & the 53 + practice squad #151974
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    from https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/8/28/24230955/rams-2024-practice-squad-depth-chart-roster?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=socialflow&utm_content=turfshowtimes&utm_source=twitter

    [EDITED]

    .
    Here is your 2024 Rams practice squad (for now):

    • OL A.J. Arcuri
    • OL Justin Dedich
    • TE Miller Forristall
    • DB Tanner Ingle
    • DB Shaun Jolly
    • TE Nikola Kalinic
    • DB Cam Lampkin
    • DT Tuli Letuligasenoa
    • OL Mike McAllister
    • WR Xavier Smith
    • WR Drake Stoops
    • DB Jason Taylor II
    • OLB Keir Thomas
    • WR Sam Wiglusz
    • RB Zach Evans (exception)
    • LB Zach VanValkenburg (exception)

    Teams are allowed to keep 16 players on the practice squad, but there are certain rules that would allow for exceptions. The Rams have two exceptions in Zach Evans and Zach VanValkenburg.

     

     

    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 8/28 – 8/30 #151973
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    NFL Stats@NFL_Stats

    Here are the most expensive QBs for the 2024 season:

    Deshaun Watson – $63.8M
    Dak Prescott – $55.1M
    Kyler Murray – $49.1M
    Daniel Jones – $47.9M
    Matthew Stafford – $46.2M
    Patrick Mahomes – $37.0M
    Lamar Jackson – $32.4M
    Josh Allen – $30.4M
    Joe Burrow – $29.6M
    Jared Goff – $27.2M

    in reply to: cut downs, & the 53 + practice squad #151971
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    Los Angeles Rams@RamsNFL
    LA Rams Roster Moves:
    • Waived, No Recall DT Cory Durden
    • Claimed RB Cody Schrader
    • Reserve/Injured T Conor McDermott
    • Signed to Active Roster DT Neville Gallimore
    PFF LA Rams@PFF_Rams
    The Rams have claimed Cody Schrader off of waivers from the 49ers. This preseason:

    48 rushing yards
    35 yards after contact
    4 kick returns
    30.0 yards per return

    Rams sign DL Neville Gallimore, make other roster moves

    Stu Jackson

    Originally a third-round pick out of Oklahoma by the Dallas Cowboys in the 2020 NFL Draft, Gallimore has produced 90 total tackles (11 for loss), 9 QB hits and four sacks across 52 career games (14 starts) in four seasons.

    After four seasons with the Cowboys, Gallimore signed with the Dolphins on March 15 earlier this offseason. He was in Miami until the team including him among its roster cuts to get down to 53.

    In addition to that move, the Rams also placed offensive lineman Conor McDermott on Injured Reserve, waived defensive tackle Cory Durden and signed running back Cody Schrader to the active roster.

    in reply to: setting up Rams at Lions, 9/8 at 8:20 et 5:20 pt #151968
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    Los Angeles Rams vs. Detroit Lions | 2024 Week 1 Game Preview

    in reply to: tweets…around the league (starting 8/6) #151966
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    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Josh Allen and other QBs cite offseason work with biomechanics experts as what make them more accurate, controlled throwers. Some hope advancements in this tech can help save or sustain their arms. But some NFL teams are simply not equipped to bridge the info gap. How can they?
    .
    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 8/28 – 8/30 #151965
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    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Rams claim RB Cody Schrader (49ers)
Viewing 30 posts - 5,521 through 5,550 (of 47,037 total)