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  • in reply to: plays, highlights, etc … visuals from the Ravens game #147415
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    in reply to: plays, highlights, etc … visuals from the Ravens game #147413
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    in reply to: twitter, reporters, big articles, etc… Ravens game #147410
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    69RamFan

    Stafford made some beautiful throws,
    I just don’t see many QBs making throws like he made.
    Example, knowing the rush is coming in,
    He throws the ball early but floats it to give it airtime,
    So, his WR would be there in time to make the catch.
    I don’t see any future QB coming out of college making throws like that.
    The only QBs that I see making throws like that, are Staff, Mahomes, and Rodgers.

    roberto clemente@rclemente2121
    this is only the second time the ravens have trailed at the half this year – the other time, in week 3, they lost.

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Lucas Havrisik hit the FG from 51. He’s the “took that personal” meme this week after Rams picked up Crosby, I guess!
    .
    Blaine Grisak@bgrisakTST
    This season the Rams were scheduled four teams coming off of their bye week. That was tied for the league lead. Results so far…

    @ DAL: Lost 43-20
    vs. PIT: Lost 24-17
    @ BAL: Lost 37-31

    …the Rams play Washington off of their bye next week.

    JAKE ELLENBOGEN@JKBOGEN
    Here’s how many QBs have thrown at least 3 TDs in each the last three games:

    #Rams QB Matthew Stafford

    in reply to: around the league going into week 14 #147408
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    in reply to: plays, highlights, etc … visuals from the Ravens game #147404
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    in reply to: twitter, reporters, big articles, etc… Ravens game #147403
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    Rodrigue: Rams’ overtime loss to Ravens a head-spinning range of realities

    By Jourdan Rodrigue

    https://theathletic.com/5126691/2023/12/10/rams-overtime-loss-ravens/?source=emp_shared_article

    BALTIMORE — Never have I covered an NFL season in which this thought has rung in my head so frequently: Wow, there are a few ways to react to this.

    That’s the fairest way to look at the Los Angeles Rams’ Week 14 overtime loss to the Baltimore Ravens, off a rare walk-off punt return touchdown in a downpour that featured multiple missed tackles and, yes, a missed block in the back penalty. Players, coaches and fans are all emotional after a loss like that, when the team went toe-to-toe with the NFL’s best, yet still committed enough self-inflicted mistakes to have everyone wondering “What if … ?” afterward.

    Quarterback Matthew Stafford orchestrated a score-tying drive with 1:16 to play, after what felt like a rock fight in the third and fourth quarters. On the road and in overtime, minus starting right tackle Rob Havenstein (groin), veteran tight end Tyler Higbee (inactive; neck stinger) and speed threat receiver Tutu Atwell (concussion protocol), the Rams had a real shot. Their defense also forced a three-and-out to open the extra time.

    But also …

    The Rams’ defense broke down at the worst time in regulation, after a day in which it gave up three touchdowns off of breakdowns in the secondary (all explosive pass plays). MVP candidate quarterback Lamar Jackson — who is the caliber of player, whether in structure or creating on the move who can make the seemingly impossible happen — hit a 21-yard touchdown pass to rookie receiver Zay Flowers, then a two-point conversion to put the Ravens ahead 31-28 with 1:22 to play. That the play happened after an overly long time stoppage by the game’s officials seemed even worse.

    “They had more explosives than we did,” veteran safety John Johnson III said. “We had opportunities to end it, to (put) it away and we didn’t. … We were just trying to get in the best play, seeing from what they were doing. I think we were in a decent coverage. I think it was a good call. But we didn’t execute. We were this close. Everybody knew what they had to do, but we were this close and just couldn’t get it done.”

    Added Rams coach Sean McVay, “We had plenty of time to get a call in. They came out in a loaded four-by-one formation. We were in a call that we liked, and it didn’t go down for us. You credit Zay (Flowers) for making that play, and Lamar (Jackson) for being able to stand in there and make the throw.”

    Jackson threw for 316 yards and the three touchdowns, plus an interception (veteran cornerback Ahkello Witherspoon came up clutch at the right time, yet again).

    In the “you never see that” category, the Rams’ defense also notched a second safety in as many weeks, after a missed snap rolled into the end zone. Jackson felt Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald bearing down on the ball and kicked it out of the back of the end zone, which led to a declined penalty and ultimately the safety. For every costly breakdown, the Rams’ defense seemed to also string together a few impressive plays or series against an elite group of skill players and their star quarterback.

    But also …

    Young kicker Lucas Havrisik hit a 36-yard field goal in the rain with 11 seconds left to tie the score 31-31. Havrisik started the week believing he’d lost his job, after misses in the last two games. The Rams signed veteran kicker Mason Crosby on Wednesday.

    McVay, by the way, addressed the oddness of the Rams’ decision to sign Crosby to the practice squad, elevate him for Sunday’s game and then not activate him in favor of Havrisik, saying, “You look at it as a competition and Lucas earned the right to be kicking today based on what we saw throughout the course of the week … (the elevation) was based on conversations and expectations that we had set. We wanted to be able to follow through on our word to the people that were involved in bringing Mason in.”

    Havrisik showed a lot of toughness Sunday in how he responded to the entire situation. He didn’t lose his job, and then he made his kicks. Enough said.

    But also …

    Rookie fifth-round tight end Davis Allen, who had a breakout game with four catches for 50 yards and a touchdown, also had a drop on third-and-9 in overtime that led to that punt return. That will stick with him. So will the Rams’ delay-of-game penalty that moved them back 5 yards on the down.

    Odd moments flared up throughout the game, from the very first offensive possession. Well, that wasn’t odd in itself — the Rams ran the ball nine times in a row for 67 yards to open the game. They changed the points of contact for the Ravens’ defensive players on what seemed like every play, testing space in the box and around the edges.

    More specifically, the oddity was what I’ll refer to as “call-sheet whiplash” when the Rams threw three consecutive times out of shotgun from the Baltimore 9-yard line, all incomplete, and settled for a field goal. They threw four times in a row on their second possession, too, gaining 17 yards but also losing 8 on a sack before punting.

    McVay also said the offense had issues with the headsets that caused them to burn their last timeout of regulation, ahead of a third-and-6 at the Baltimore 18-yard line with 16 seconds left.

    “You don’t want to have to use that timeout, but he couldn’t hear me,” McVay said of Stafford. “You’re gonna have to go backwards, then that limits some of your options.”

    Stafford said the situation popped up twice Sunday, indicating it was a communication issue.

    “On that play, I just got to hear him better,” Stafford said, referring to the third-and-9 before the timeout. “I was unclear as to what play he was wanting in.”

    But also …

    The Ravens have one of the best defenses in the NFL, if not the best. They are smart and multiple. After Los Angeles put up 216 yards of offense in the first half, including 85 rushing yards, Baltimore adjusted well. The Ravens had four tackles for loss just on run plays on the first two Rams possessions of the second half. The third quarter was a slugfest between the two teams.

    “(They played) a little bit more base to 11 (personnel) for us, we just didn’t execute well enough in the second half,” Stafford said. “Close football game, not gonna be perfect. Conditions aren’t perfect. I don’t know what they are, the No. 2 defense in the league, they’re gonna have some say in it as well. I thought our guys were steady all game. Continued to trust each other, trust the process. Go battle, play physical.”

    Los Angeles got back to the run on a go-ahead touchdown drive that began with 8:01 left in the fourth quarter. As they did to open the game, they mixed up the direction and contact points of their run plays from snap to snap, first sending Kyren Williams around the left side and then up the middle for 21 yards over two plays. Then Stafford slung it around, connecting a laser of a throw with receiver Puka Nacua on an acrobatic 23-yard catch, and hitting Allen over the middle for another 21 yards (both on first downs). Receiver Cooper Kupp, who had his most productive game since Oct. 15 with eight catches for 115 yards and a touchdown, all on “vintage” Kupp plays, including a 12-yard catch-and-run on the aforementioned drive. Stafford connected with former Raven Demarcus Robinson for the touchdown that put the Rams up 28-23, and then hit Robinson again on the score-tying final drive of regulation for 19 yards. Kupp had a 34-yard catch-and-run on that drive that got the Rams to the Baltimore 22-yard line with 44 seconds left.

    But also …

    The two-point conversion try from Stafford to Kupp on the earlier fourth-quarter drive failed. A step forward, a half-step back, a step forward. Go back to the beginning of this column. It’s a jumble of realities. “If that had happened previously, then would this other thing have happened?” It’s enough to drive a person mad, in the city that claims Edgar Allan Poe. When the emotions settle, everyone will take from this game what they want to see.

    “There’s plays everybody wants back that probably could have changed the outcome,” Stafford said.

    “We had our chances, as a team,” McVay said. “To be even able to have those chances, guys did a lot of good stuff. When it comes down to it, we’ll learn from it (and) respond the right way.”

    A punch-for-punch game, and also a miss-for-miss game. A loss, yet still a more competitive game than the betting lines, or the general public, or even the media believed it would be.

    But also …

    Special teams.

    in reply to: reactions to the Ravens game #147401
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    Legitimately. This team is real. And I can’t wait for next year. This is a good football team.

    Agreed. To elaborate on that–

    It’s the 2nd youngest team in the league.

    Here’s what the Rams will have next year:

    * draft picks

    * cap space

    * more experienced players. The ones they keep will be seasoned by the experience and sobered by memories of the mistakes they made this season. That’s part of each player’s mental development, and part of the coaches knowing who they have and how to use them and what they need to work on.

    in reply to: twitter, reporters, big articles, etc… Ravens game #147399
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    roberto clemente@rclemente2121
    against sfo, dal and bal the rams defense gave up an avg of 31.7 offensive pts per game (30, 31, 34).

    against everyone else, against their other 10 opponents, they gave up an avg of just 18.0 offensive pts per game.

    so not enough horses to match sfo, dal, bal? raheem?

    Rams Brothers@RamsBrothers
    The Rams have put up 56 points in 6 quarters against the league’s best 2 defenses (statistically) in back-to-back weeks.

    Outrageously good coaching job by McVay, with the exception of a few minor situational mistakes

    RAMS REPORT@RamsNFLReport
    Cooper Kupp with the touchdown in the back corner of the endzone! ?? Beautiful touch by Stafford to put it right where it needed to be in the face of pressure.

    Blaine Grisak@bgrisakTST
    The 3rd-and-17 will be the focus.

    But let’s forget about Stafford missing an open Kyren Williams in OT. Puka drop. McVay red-zone playcalling on opening drive.

    It’s more than just one play.

    J.B. Long@JB_Long
    First time since the bye the Rams defense gets a stop on the opponent’s first possession. They’ve allowed 5 TDs in last 3 weeks, and 3 had been on opponent’s first touch. Great start to W14 in BAL

    Rams Brothers@RamsBrothers
    Man, if Davis Allen turns out to be a starter. This draft class is absolutely legendary and Les Snead can have his job as long as he wants.

    in reply to: plays, highlights, etc … visuals from the Ravens game #147397
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    in reply to: twitter, reporters, big articles, etc… Ravens game #147394
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    Cameron DaSilva@camdasilva
    The Rams took a costly timeout with 16 seconds left in the fourth quarter, completely changing their play selection with a chance to win it. Sean McVay said the Rams had “issues with the headsets,” so Stafford couldn’t hear the play
    .

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    Sean McVay says (among many postgame comments) they were having issues with the headset through the game and on the last drive of regulation Stafford couldn’t hear him in the helmet – led to calling that third time out to communicate.

    Matthew Stafford said, “on that play, I just had to hear him better. I was unclear as to what play he was wanting in.”

    in reply to: Rams chances for the playoffs #147393
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    I feel if we win our last 5 games, making the playoffs, would be great, but not a guarantee we make the playoffs. But, it will give us a chance. Winning 4 out of our last 5, we will need help, to make it into the playoffs. I’m going off, on what I see.

    Not sure if this is clear in the discussion but the Rams have 4 games left, not 5. To me it looks like they get in if they win 3 of their last 4.

    in reply to: Week 14: Rams @ Ravens … w/ broadcast map #147377
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    roberto clemente@rclemente2121
    mcvay era:

    in games that meet the following conditions: outdoors, away, opponent had winning record, and
    gametime temp was 56° or below, the rams are:

    5-6
    1-3 (2021-2023)
    4-3 (2017-2020)

    biggest win was the 42-7 beatdown the rams dealt seattle in 2017, it was beautiful!

    in reply to: Week 14: Rams @ Ravens … w/ broadcast map #147375
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    in reply to: Week 14: Rams @ Ravens … w/ broadcast map #147374
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    Blaine Grisak @bgrisakTST
    Going to be important for Rams not to let this one snowball early. If they can stay within striking distance, they’ll have a shot. Ravens rank 25th in 4th quarter points allowed, 24th in 4th quarter defense EPA per play, and 26th in 4th quarter defense success-rate.
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    Rams Brothers@RamsBrothers
    The Rams’ offense can handle the rain. Their entire run game can stay intact if their offensive line can show more physicality. Their pass game will just be condensed a bit to feature more of the quick game (short drop backs, play action, heavy usage of screens).
    in reply to: signing another kicker #147367
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    Rams Brothers@RamsBrothers
    Yesterday: we probably aren’t going to elevate Mason Crosby to the active roster for Sunday
    Today: Rams elevate Mason Crosby to the active roster for Sunday
    in reply to: farr interviews ellard #147365
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    These segments are very very cool. Ellard states that he returned punts early in his career to get chances to touch the ball more often since they had Dickerson in the backfield is a very nice way of saying our QBs sucked before the Jim Everrett era….. 200+ receiving yards against Dickerson’s Colts….and he felt bad for Dickerson. #80 Ellard

    in reply to: Week 14: Rams @ Ravens … w/ broadcast map #147363
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    Rams preparing for weather, Lamar Jackson & a big challenge in Week 14 | Game Preview

    J.B. Long

    https://www.therams.com/news/rams-game-preview-week-14-ravens-lamar-jackson

    Since the Rams’ return to Los Angeles, there have been two consequential clashes with the Baltimore Ravens. And perhaps there’s another on the horizon this weekend.

    First, in 2019, Lamar Jackson posted a career-high 99.8 QBR in his lone start against L.A., orchestrating a 45-6 win at the Coliseum, the equivalent of his “Heisman Moment” in what proved to be an MVP season.

    Then, in 2021, the Rams spun No Win November into Undefeated December, plus that crucial fifth consecutive win to ring in the new year.

    On that January 2, 2022, in Baltimore, the Rams didn’t take their first lead until the final minute of the fourth quarter, and even then it required a spectacular fourth down conversion from Matthew Stafford to Odell Beckham, Jr. immediately followed by the game-winning touchdown featuring the same duo.

    My recollection of that day is that it cemented the foundation on which the subsequent Super Bowl run was built. You simply cannot tell the story of the Rams championship campaign without a chapter (at least) devoted to that comeback.

    Now, with the Ravens chasing the AFC’s top seed and the Rams in the NFC playoff hunt, Sunday has similar potential to be an inflection point for either franchise.

    Sunday, the Rams will be out to win a fourth straight game for the first time since… that five-game streak culminating in the aforementioned win over Baltimore deep in the 2021 season.

    Regardless of where it goes from here, I’ve seen enough to believe the Rams were right to bet on themselves in 2023 – to retool on the fly rather than tearing it down and rebuilding. There seem to be so many lasting benefits to this climb back to contention since the bye. And the performances during this streak validate that the decision-makers were correct in seeing the playoff potential in this group.

    Whether or not they can get there remains to be seen. But I want to be on the record in appreciation of the thought process now rather than getting caught up in the results yet to come.

    Fair Warning

    These next three games are going to be rapid-fire, with two home dates in five days on the backside of this road trip. Those contests against the Commanders and Saints are very likely to be your last two chances to see the Rams in person at SoFi Stadium (but prove me wrong, Rams!).

    It will be Christmas and Week 17 before we know it.

    High Five

    The closing stretch sets up like a Super Bowl sandwich – and you know I’m a carb lover because I’m focused on how good the bread is.

    The Ravens and 49ers are clearly capable of winning it all, and each could wind up as top seeds come January.

    In between are three games in which the Rams are likely to be favored.

    3-2 would leave the Rams with a winning record with a very high probability of making the postseason. 4-1 would effectively clinch a playoff berth. 5-0, and there’s no keeping L.A. out.

    This is how we broke it down on Between the Horns.

    In The Bleak December

    Not to go all Edgar Allan Poe on you, here, but there’s a significant storm in the forecast for Sunday.

    Here’s hoping… “Tis the wind and nothing more!”

    I found it interesting that this week Sean McVay conceded the Rams were not as prepared as they could have been for cold, slick conditions in Green Bay last month and will adjust accordingly for Baltimore.

    Kicking Carousel

    I wonder if the anticipated rain and wind didn’t also play into the Rams thinking with respect to adding Mason Crosby to the practice squad, with the expectation that he’ll debut in Baltimore – a natural grass, outdoor surface.

    I think there’s good data to support Lucas Havrisik’s case as a pro. The height and length of his attempts have been enticing. He simply has more work to do to refine his talent. It’s telling the Rams aren’t giving him the boot, right?

    Nonetheless, I’m encouraged to see the Rams make a move like this to stabilize the position as the stakes get higher and the conditions could deteriorate (Baltimore, New York, San Francisco all have outdoor stadiums).

    Meantime, for the first time in seven seasons, Justin Tucker is no longer the most accurate kicker in the NFL record books. Jamison Hensley of ESPN reports that Tucker missed from 44 in Week 12 against the Chargers to fall to 89.9 percent career, allowing Atlanta’s Younghoe Koo (90.1%) to supplant him.

    Tucker’s still a five-time first-team All-Pro for the Ravens and owns the longest make in league history (from 66 yards last year). His five missed field goals in 2023 are his most through 12 games since 2015, but it’s important to note that four of those misses have come from 53 yards or longer.

    Rain or Shine

    No matter the weather, these Ravens are for real, as evidenced by the following from NFL Research.

    They lead the league in scoring defense. And since Week 6, they have the second-best scoring offense, too.

    They’ve trailed for 45 minutes and 37 seconds total, by far the least amount of time in the NFL in 2023.

    22 rushing touchdowns are tied with the Dolphins for most in the NFL and are two shy of matching the Ravens franchise record; they’ve scored at least one rushing touchdown in six straight and in 11 of 12 games this season; they’re No. 1 in average starting field position…

    You get the point.

    Catching Flacco

    All due respect to the Ravens Super Bowl MVP for taking down the 49ers in February of 2013, but no one is mistaking Lamar Jackson for 38-year-old Joe Flacco.

    Jackson could very well be the best opposing quarterback the Rams face this season. And for whatever reason, he destroys NFC competition.

    Jackson is 18-1 in his career against the opposing conference, and his only loss came in 2022 at the New York Giants.

    On this week’s Rams Revealed, defensive tackle Bobby Brown III had a strong take about Jackson ranking among the NFL’s elite.

    Intermediate Level

    According to Next Gen Stats, Jackson leads the NFL in touchdown-to-interception ratio (7-0) and passer rating (137.4) on intermediate throws in 2023 (measured as targets between 10 and 19 air yards).

    What’s more concerning? Defensively, the Rams have allowed a 110.3 passer rating on intermediate passes (fourth-worst in NFL). So that shapes up as a mismatch to monitor.

    Of note, though, Baltimore’s All-Pro tight end Mark Andrews is on injured reserve. And he was a dominant intermediate target for Jackson and the Ravens, particularly in the red zone.

    Something’s Got to Give

    The Ravens have scored 20-plus points in seven straight games, tied for the longest active streak in the league with the Dallas Cowboys.

    Conversely, the Rams have held four consecutive opponents to 20 or fewer.

    First Things First

    What’s even more stunning about the above is that opponents have scored first-possession touchdowns in every game of this Rams winning streak. The Seahawks, Cardinals, and Browns all marched at least nine plays and 75 yards to paydirt using their offensive script.

    To underscore that point, L.A. has allowed a total of five touchdowns since their bye week – three of them have come on opening drives! (A fourth was in blowout time at Arizona after the Rams had pulled starters.)

    That led me to check the rest of the schedule, and as it turns out, the Rams have allowed six touchdowns and two field goals on their opponents’ first drives.

    Surely, that’s a trend we’ll all be focused on reversing come Sunday.

    Buy Myself Flowers

    There’s also a nice clash between rookie receivers this weekend.

    Zay Flowers needs 229 receiving yards to pass Torrey Smith (841 in 2011) for the most by a Ravens rookie (Flowers has already reset the franchise rookie record for receptions).

    Only Puka Nacua (77) has more receptions among rookie pass-catchers. And to eclipse Jaylen Waddle’s rookie record of 104 grabs set in 2021, Nacua needs to average 5.4 per game the rest of the way.

    Highlights: Puka Nacua’s record-setting season so far | Every Nacua reception at the Rams’ 2023 bye

    Deep Tracks

    Shout out to my old friend Mark Simon from Sports Info Solutions for sharing this tidbit about how Matthew Stafford’s been finding renewed success downfield in 2023.

    On throws 20-plus yards downfield, he went 7-of-27 with two touchdowns and three interceptions last year.

    In 2023, he’s 20-of-38 for three scores and only one pick. Those are even better outcomes than his championship season of 2021 when he completed 50 percent of such throws but also committed nine turnovers.

    (He and Tutu Atwell have also been piling up penalty yardage on earned pass interference flags.)

    P.T.O.

    Hate to be the bearer of bad news, but just a reminder that the Ravens are the third of four Rams opponents this season that will be coming off their bye – next week’s opponent is the fourth.

    So far, the Steelers and Cowboys have earned wins over L.A. after their open dates.

    It’s a severe scheduling disadvantage and one the Rams will have to find a way to overcome to keep their playoff push on track.

    Don’t expect any sympathy from the Ravens, who have the second-most difficult remaining strength of schedule per ESPN Analytics. After the Rams visit, Baltimore finishes at Jacksonville, at San Francisco, then home to the Dolphins and Steelers.

    May the Fourth Be With You

    If there’s any weakness to the 9-3 Ravens, it’s the fourth quarter. And that’s baffling for a team that runs it so efficiently.

    Baltimore has earned the NFL’s best scoring differential (+157) in the first three quarters of games this season. They have led at the end of the third quarter in all 12 games, and that’s tied for the third-longest streak to begin a season in the Super Bowl Era, according to NFL Research.

    But in the fourth quarter (and overtime), their scoring differential plummets to -20.

    83 of the 174 points Baltimore has surrendered this season have been scored in the fourth quarter and overtime.

    Cheese Platter

    As for peers on the NFC playoff bubble, here’s my updated survey of the landscape.

    I don’t know that the Rams can reasonably expect to surpass the Packers down the stretch. (Luckily, my wife says I have a unique gift for being wrong.)

    Green Bay doesn’t have an opponent with a winning record left on their remaining schedule. And more importantly, they have that pesky head-to-head win over Los Angeles.

    Look at these two adversaries and tell me which one looks more vulnerable to being overtaken by the Rams.

    Green Bay (6-6): at NYG, TB, at CAR, at MIN, CHI

    Minnesota (6-6): at LV, at CIN, DET, GB, at DET

    Doesn’t it seem like it’s the Vikings ship that needs to sink to make room for the Rams in the wild card race?

    It’s too early for this, but I’ll also preview the potential for a three-way tie between the Rams, Packers, and Vikings in which case the key for L.A. is that the first step would be to eliminate all but the highest-ranked club in each division. Therefore, the Rams goal is to have a better record than both or to have the same record as the Packers and Vikings. But again, that’s for a much later day.

    A more pressing concern: finding ponchos for Sunday.

    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 12/6 – 12/9 #147362
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    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 12/6 – 12/9 #147361
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    Sarah Barshop@sarahbarshop
    Sean McVay said the Rams are “very different, in a positive way,” when RB Kyren Williams is playing. “The energy, the production, the leadership that he provides … I don’t think it’s by mistake that we’re at our best when he’s a part of this offense and when he’s playing.”
    in reply to: Rams’ Biggest Need #147360
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    think the Rams should just part ways with Akers. Soon. Very soon. Probably should have done it already.

    But in our wildest dreams, do we imagine them having a replacement for Akers on hand and ready?

    I suppose they can always just re-sign Todd Gurley.

    in reply to: Rams injuries going into week 14/game 13 #147358
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    Stu Jackson@StuJRams
    Sean McVay said TE Tyler Higbee (neck) will be doubtful for Sunday’s game against the Ravens. OLB Michael Hoecht (knee), OLB Byron Young (knee) and Quentin Lake (hamstring) will be questionable and limited in today’s practice.
    .
    Sarah Barshop@sarahbarshop
    Rams TE Tyler Higbee is listed as doubtful to play against the Ravens. Sean McVay said, “I know that there’s nobody that’s going to work harder over these next 48 hours to put himself in position to be ready. If he can go, great and if not then he’ll be leading on the sideline.”
    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 12/6 – 12/9 #147357
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    roberto clemente@rclemente2121
    last week’s game vs the browns marked the first time stafford, since joining the rams, has led the offense to more than 30 pts in consecutive gms, and to 4 or more tds in consecutive gms. it also marked the first time the rams have won 3 consecutive games in the last two years.
    .
    wk 13 love for stafford…all he did was lead his offense to 34 pts vs the #4 defense in pts allowed, threw 3 tds, and posted a qb rtg of 110.1 (his 2nd highest of the season). yet for wk 13 pff ranked him #14 in passing, while his epa+cpoe comp was #13.
    .
    PFF LA Rams@PFF_Rams
    Matthew Stafford: 87.4 PFF grade on 3rd & 4th down this season 2nd among all QBs
    in reply to: Rams’ Biggest Need #147356
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    Thank god we have these boards to share actual information.

    Yeah. Okay. Great. Nice Speech.

    But that aside…where do you stand on the hugely controversial Cam Akers contract extension issue?

    And choose your words carefully….

    in reply to: Rams’ Biggest Need #147354
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     as CBS observes, they also should be thinking about the impact of Cam Akers’ impending FA.

    This will be of course a defining issue that determines what the Rams can, should, and might be. I expect a divisive issue like this one to drive the entire off-season discussion.

    The Rams showed better than expected in 2023, and to put it mildly, Akers did nothing to impede that.

    People just don’t talk about Akers’s contribution to the Rams in 2023 which just shows that obviously, it goes without saying.

    in reply to: Week 14: Rams @ Ravens … w/ broadcast map #147350
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    They talk about the Rams for about the first 13 minutes or so.

    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 12/6 – 12/9 #147349
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    in reply to: Week 14: Rams @ Ravens … w/ broadcast map #147347
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    They cover the Rams at about 4:18 in.

    in reply to: Rams tweets etc. … 12/6 – 12/9 #147346
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    in reply to: plays, highlights, breakdowns … Browns game #147345
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    in reply to: plays, highlights, breakdowns … Browns game #147344
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