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  • in reply to: reactions to the Rams @Bengals game #145671
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    We knew the season would be up and down, but self-inflicted wounds shouldn’t be the reason for a loss.

    Seems to me, on the contrary, that the youngest team in football will lose that way more often than not.

    But this one felt more like actual wounds (Jackson). Losing Jackson changed the game (whenever that happened). The Rams won the first quarter, and the defense was solid throughout. Although Cincy won the TOP and ran 22 more plays than LA did, they scored only 19 points, and they got some lucky bounces.

    Their defense (Cincy’s) deserves credit. They played well; they took advantage of Jackson’s injury, and they got more aggressive once there was blood in the water. I don’t understand why Noteboom didn’t take over at LOT (who did, btw? I never saw the guy, and the announcers didn’t seem to think it was important).

    I hope Jackson is not seriously hurt.

    (And SCREW this sh!t about needing to subscribe to 6 different streaming services in order to watch football! This is such BS. I actually broke down and bought youtube this year, and so far, it’s been of no use to me the first 3 weeks).

    in reply to: reactions to the Rams @Bengals game #145667
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    This looks about right:

    in reply to: Nacua #145644
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Just did a quick search to see what draft reports were like on Nacua, and the one thing that came up consistently is his tendency to miss a lot of games due to injury. Quite a few comments about his tenacity, and YAC.

    in reply to: Turner #145643
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Fixt it!

    Thanks.

    I see a bunch of active links in there. I thought those screwed up everything, so I’ve been removing them from my posts. Is that glitch fixed, or is this just your magic admin powers?

    in reply to: Rams tweets … 9/21 – 9/23 #145626
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I hated that uniform change when it came out.

    I still prefer the blue and whites, but I would take that 50-year old uniform over anything they’ve worn in the past 20 years.

    in reply to: setting up the Bengals game (us, reporters, tweets, etc.) #145625
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    i’m hoping the rams just blow the bengals out of the water.

    I agree that this would be for the best, all things considered.

    in reply to: stats (before game 3) #145613
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I wonder if the Rams have “gone away from tendencies.” What with the different approach to the running game on offense, I am curious if their early success is “real,” or if defenses will catch up with the Rams once there is more film on the season.

    in reply to: setting up the Bengals game (us, reporters, tweets, etc.) #145591
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    BENGALS FAN: I’m going over to check out the Rams board. I bet those guys are talking all kinds of smack about the Bengals!

    RAMS FANS: San Diego sports teams sure do suck, man. And they’re ugly.

    in reply to: setting up the Bengals game (us, reporters, tweets, etc.) #145586
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    So…anyways…how ’bout them Bengals?

    I hope Burrow plays on a bad leg.

    in reply to: setting up the Bengals game (us, reporters, tweets, etc.) #145585
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    What in the world is ‘that’?   Is that the Padres? Ok, somebody actually thought of that.  And designed it.  And got it approved.  And they marketed it.    And i guess there were focus groups, and surveys and profit-algebra that preceded those decisions. So who is that aimed at?   LGBT folks?   Teens?   Color-blind people? I dunno.   What do i know.   I’m an old-school-curmudgeon, so i should just shut up.   w

    It’s mind-boggling. And on TV, you can’t make out the last names on the back of the jersey. Yellow on white. Truly bad.

    And the split San Diego on front. Awful.

    I had a Padres fan jump on me for criticizing them on Twitter, and they said that the San Diego represents the sunset on the ocean.

    And I’m…”If that’s what the sky and ocean look like in San Diego, ya’ll got issues.”

    Get that mess outta here.

    in reply to: plays & play analysis, SF game #145584
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Avila has me stoked. I don’t remember ever being “stoked” by a G before. The Rams have had a lot of good ones over the years, no doubt. But Avila…I don’t know. Among other things, the guy has a little motor on him. Guards are always the slowest guys on the team. They’re just retaining walls. But Avila has some wheels, and it’s kinda cute to seem him scurry across the field like a AT-AT Walker/bunny hybrid.

    Looking like the Rams mighta got themselves 2 blue chip players in the draft this year.

    in reply to: Akers not active (9/17), then traded (9/20) #145564
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Yeah that was me. Xmas of 71.  Rams vs Packers.  All the neighborhood kids became Rams fans because of that game but it only stuck permanently with me and my brother.

    I always said that your neighbors were terrible.

    in reply to: setting up the Bengals game (us, reporters, tweets, etc.) #145560
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    The Dodgers:

    in reply to: coaching #145559
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I don’t know what it is with Akers. Now sure what that story is yet. So I don’t have any speculations about it.

    Check out the dude who doesn’t have an opinion just because he doesn’t have enough information.

    Jeezuschristalmighty.

    in reply to: Akers not active (9/17), then traded (9/20) #145558
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Who was it that became a Rams fan because of that electric football game? Anybody remember that? I thought that was Cappy.

    in reply to: around the league (starting 9/13) #145551
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    in reply to: Nacua #145550
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Neither Kupp nor Woods are speedsters, but they get separation through precise route running.  Kupp takes that ability to another level. When the Rams traded Woods, it wasn’t just because of the cap. Snead said they wanted someone with a different skill set because Kupp and Woods were similar players. Then they went after Robinson who had a different skill set – which turned out to be none.  The no skill set.  But in Snead’s defense, having no skills did set him apart from Kupp and Woods.

    So you hate the pick of Nacua then.

    Okay, well that’s bold. And you’re the first.

    in reply to: Akers not active (9/17), then traded (9/20) #145549
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I remember reading this book when I was a kid. Somebody gave it to me for my birthday. My mom, maybe.

    in reply to: Akers not active (9/17), then traded (9/20) #145547
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    You know, Barry Redden was a 1st Round pick. I remembered him, but i did not remember ‘that’. 14th pick of the 1982 draft. w v

    They got Deacon Jones in the 14th round, so it kind of balances out.

    in reply to: Nacua #145545
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Purty good drafting.

    Avila and Nacua.

    Plus Kobie Turner and Byron Young, starting.

    And some promise in other guys.

    The 2023 draft is looking really, really, uncommonly good at this point. Obviously, the 3-year rule applies, by…my goodness.

    in reply to: Nacua #145542
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Kupp and Robert Woods we’re the same guy, and that worked out ok for a few years.

    I dunno about that. I think Woods’ was notable for his ability to find open space in crucial situations, and make those catches. The thing I see in Kupp and Nacua is the ability to create tight windows, fight for the ball, and then fight for extra yardage when it looks like the play is over.

    How do you see Woods and Kupp as similar?

    in reply to: setting up the Bengals game (us, reporters, tweets, etc.) #145541
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    What. The. F. are those things? I should be the NFL Uniform Czar. I’d fix all this shit in about one day. Every team goes back to 70’s-80’s Uniforms and maybe, one week of leather helmets. w v

    This is the all-time worst uniform in the history of sports.

    in reply to: coaching #145540
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    The Akers and Goff situations are different. McVay’s complaint about Akers was that he wouldn’t ‘buy in’ to the system -presumably referring to his discontent with a running back by committee approach. It was his attitude. Goff just wasn’t savvy enough in McVay’s offense to make adjustments on the fly. McVay said he always felt like he had to call the perfect play every down because Goff couldn’t make adjustments off script. It was more about QB experience than attitude. McVay never questioned Goff’s willingness to do what was asked of him, just his ability to do it.

    Yeah, I think that’s a fair assessment.

     

    in reply to: Nacua #145535
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    he and kupp should be dynamite together. if he’s supposedly playing the robert woods role. and cooper kupp will presumably play the uhhhh… cooper kupp role, they should complement each other instead of being redundant. that’s also very encouraging.

    My concern – and it was expressed by Steven Smith – is that Kupp and Nacua are the same guy. Not complementary guys.

    But…I would think a good coach would be able to stress a defense with 2 guys who are that good. And maybe this is where Atwell actually gets to be the lightning.

    in reply to: Nacua #145534
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    How Rams WR Puka Nacua is growing with ‘Coach Kupp,’ a breakfast club and tough hits

    by Jourdan Rodrigue

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — In 2021, it was playfully nicknamed “the breakfast club,” a daily film appointment between
    Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford and receiver Cooper Kupp that took place in the earliest hours of the
    morning.These days, a third player sits in with the two veterans: rookie receiver Puka Nacua.
    “Those two — as much as they’re in the moment for the reps that we’re taking, they’re thinking light-years ahead. ‘Hey, we’ve
    played this team before, on this look we have run this before, we’ve got a different look so when you run this, expect this
    because we’ve seen that before,’”said Nacua, waving his hands to demonstrate how rapid-fire the information comes toward
    him from Stafford and Kupp.“It’s been sweet, it’s been a blessing. Every morning. …They’re next level.I guess that’s a part
    of being a professional.They are the best of the best.I’m trying to build some of those things into my routine.”
    Nacua burst into the NFL’s view in historic fashion.In just two games — minus Kupp, who is on injured reserve with a
    hamstring issue — Nacua has 25 catches for 266 yards and the Rams’ pass game has a 15.9 EPA whenever he is targeted,
    according to TruMedia.This ranks No. 4 among NFL receivers. His 15 catches for 147 yards (on 20 targets) Sunday marked
    the most catches made in a single game by a rookie receiver in NFL history, and he is also the first in NFL history to have
    10-plus catches and at least 100 yards receiving in each of his first two career games.

    Getting to this point has been a group effort, Nacua said, and it started in spring OTAs — just a few weeks after the Rams
    drafted him out of BYU in the fifth round.
    If “the breakfast club”is a graduate-level study program, Nacua had to begin with some “gen eds.” During OTAs, he started
    showing up in the mornings to passing game specialist Jake Peetz’s office — Kupp and Stafford in a room somewhere down
    the hall — to get a base layer of information about the Rams’ passing concepts, from alignment details to formations and how
    the team layers and times routes.
    “Every morning (of OTAs) I was coming in, after practice coming in to see him,”Nacua said.“It slowly started branching out
    from there. (Peetz) got me some reps with the ones, and I was able to work with Stafford and with Coop. (Then, Stafford) is
    giving me coaching points because we got live reps together. … Everybody (started) chiming in.”
    On the field, Nacua worked closely with receivers coach Eric Yarber especially on what his responsibilities would be away
    from the ball. Catching passes well doesn’t guarantee playing time for Rams receivers, who are fully involved in blocking
    concepts along with the tight ends and offensive linemen.If Nacua could grasp the requirements there, he could get on the
    field earlier.
    “It really did start in the run game,”Nacua said.“If we have a closer split, if I’m all the way out wide, how does that change
    our run rules? …That was,I guess (a way) to build into our offense.It starts in our play-action, stuff like that.The ground
    level really was all the run game stuff, and I love that.I found a new way to look at the defense.”
    By Week 2 against San Francisco, Nacua was executing some of the run-blocking assignments the Rams used to give former
    veteran receiver Robert Woods.
    “Those receivers, they got to put their face in there and when they do, it sets a tone for everyone else on offense,” offensive
    coordinator Mike LaFleur said.“It’s good that he’s embraced that.I think that’s the culture he walked into and like I said,
    giving Yarbs (Yarber) a lot of credit for getting that done.”
    As OTAs and training camp continued, Nacua took coaching wherever he could get it.In June, McVay spent time in
    practices working with Nacua on his release off the line of scrimmage.In July, between OTAs and training camp, Stafford
    organized throwing sessions with Nacua, Kupp and other young receivers.In training camp and into the preseason while he
    dealt with a hamstring strain, Kupp spent most practices on the sideline with the receivers and got in Nacua and others’ ears
    after each play. But the other receivers — Tutu Atwell, Van Jefferson and Ben Skowronek — also got in Nacua’s ear.
    “The other guys have been right there along the way, helping me as much as they can,” he said.“As much as I feel like I’m
    learning things, and picking things up, there’s the little nuances (they know), they’ve just been in the offense for a while.
    They’re always willing to help me.

    By the time the season began, Nacua had “graduated”from his morning sessions with Peetz and started sitting in with
    Stafford and Kupp.
    “I’m kind of following Coop, like, ‘Hey, when do you guys come in? Hey, Coop, can I watch with you guys?’”Nacua said
    laughing.“The first couple of meetings,I’m like a fly on the wall. Nothing is really being said to me, they’re just like,
    watching the tape (and) talking to each other.Then they’re like, ‘Oh, Puka, you’re in on this rep? This is what we want you to
    do.’ And I’m like, ‘Oh, you’re talking to me?’I’m so focused the whole time! My ears perk up and I’m like, ‘He’s talking to me
    now.’”
    As the season approached, coaches started to see the young receiver “get it.”LaFleur noticed that when Stafford broke the
    huddle, and Nacua went to his spot, he did so without confusion or indecision.
    “There’s a lot of things that are said in that huddle for a rookie receiver that they’ve never experienced in their life,”LaFleur
    said.“Every guy is going to be a little bit different on how they approach it … I won’t even mention names, but some
    (rookies), when the first parts of the play call are coming in, they’re pointing to what direction they have to break (out) of the
    huddle. You can almost kind of see them playing the play out with their hand and stuff like that. For Puka, he just breaks it
    with confidence — and then he goes.”

    When the Rams traveled to Seattle in Week 1, the younger receivers asked McVay if Kupp could travel with the team so he
    could be on the sideline with them.
    “What was the most powerful thing is that those guys asked,”McVay said.“Usually guys that are on IR don’t make the trips
    to these away games, things like that.Those guys specifically asked because they wanted his feedback, his ability to lead and
    the information that he’s able to give them that can be digestible and applicable. …
    “There’s such a credibility that comes.It’s one thing when we’re saying it, it’s another thing when Cooper is explaining it.To
    be able to articulate it through (the) lens, ‘I’ve been in these exact situations,I know exactly what we’re looking for.’ He was
    right there on the sidelines. He’s ‘Coach Kupp’right now.”
    Against Seattle, Nacua was targeted 15 times by Stafford, and caught 10 passes for 119 yards. He also lined up all across the
    line of scrimmage and became one of the early reads in Stafford’s progression against zone coverage, a sign that the coaching
    staff and quarterback trusted him to account for many of the concepts called for Kupp when he’s healthy.
    In that game, Nacua bruised his ribs on a tough catch across the middle of the field — “welcome to the NFL,” he said — but
    was all smiles, shoots and goshes postgame and said he couldn’t wait to call his mom

    in reply to: Akers not active (9/17), then traded (9/20) #145531
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I wouldn’t be at all surprised if Akers revives his career a bit with the Vikes and is productive there.

    I think he’s got something left in the tank, for sure.

    My speculation, based on what leaked out last season, is that Akers didn’t want to be just a guy in a RB committee, and got grumpy about not being The Man. But I dunno.

    He got robbed of an opportunity to be that guy when he blew his Achilles, and it’s too bad, but that’s football. In any event, he’s not Gurley, Jackson, Faulk, Bettis, Dickerson. More of a Barry Redden.

    in reply to: coaching #145529
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Except maybe Akers?

    Well, that’s the question, exactly. Because if it IS true with Akers, then what have we got here? Is there a commonality between Goff and Akers? Or are these situations completely unrelated?

    Outside of that, the only criticism I can muster of McVay is that his halftime adjustments don’t sing out to me as a strength (the Seattle game being a notable exception).

    It sure seems like he is coaching the hell out of this squad, though. Long way to go, of course, but these two games have got my attention.

    in reply to: comics, jokes, one-shot memes, funny tweets, etc. #145523
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator
    in reply to: Blue Sky #145517
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I’m not using social media as much as I used to, and I certainly won’t be on Twitter anymore if Musk makes it a pay site.

    Yeah, that will finish me off as well. Twitter is already bad for mental health, and if he wants to make me PAY for that depressing outcome, I would rather spend my money on bubble gum, and I don’t even like gum.

    in reply to: coaching #145516
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    we’re watching one of the best Rams coaching jobs we’ve seen

    That thought has crossed my mind since Sunday as well.

    This is not a band of seasoned, vet pro-bowlers. And they are playing well. That game Sunday was winnable, and on paper, it should not have been.

    McVay maybe is not a great psychologist when it comes to managing individuals, but he is a brilliant strategist, tactician, and group inspirational speaker. Seems like.

Viewing 30 posts - 901 through 930 (of 7,213 total)