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Okay, what changes would YOU like to see Rams make, moving forward?

Specials:
Trade for a real PR and remove Kupp asap!!!
Find a Kicker that can kick it out of the endzone every time & even if we need to dress 2 freakin kickers.

Offense:
Need to mix in a few more rollouts, move the pocket around. Just enough to keep DL off balance.
I too want to see more touches to the TE.
We need to target the seams more in order to open up the passes to outer hash marks. Seems teams are starting to jump the out routes we love so much. Even have RBs run routes up the middle into the seam. Delay release and get us some 4-7 yards easy completions. Would force the middle coverage to hold for a few more secs
Akers needs to get involved, I wonder if they think the rookie wall is a thing for him. So their waiting on him because Hendo was showing signs of a hurt bag last season. I'm still not sold on Hendo to be honest. He ate vs. the NFC Least
Need more Halle Berry audibles.
Need more Goff FG lay ups.
I would design 1-2 run plays for Goff.

Defense:
I want to cast a spell on Terrell Lewis, and he will never get hurt again, and becomes the edge we need.
Robinson gives us what we all hoped for and he clogs up the middle, and never gets pushed backwards and eats plays that come straight at him. Anything to keep snap counts down for SJD.
Fox looks like he has a role now. He's seems healthy 2 years removed from his injury.

Front Office:
Have Snead's burner account on social media follow & unfollow JJ3 daily.


Personal Growth:
PressureD41 needs to do a better job w/ his game day menu

Rams-Bears in 2018 was impactful for both Sean McVay and Brandon Staley

Rams-Bears in 2018 was impactful for both Sean McVay and Brandon Staley

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. –– Nearly two years ago, the Bears hosted the Rams on Sunday Night Football with Brandon Staley coaching Chicago's outside linebackers and Sean McVay serving as Los Angeles' head coach.

Staley and the rest of the Bears defensive coaching staff had been preparing all week for a Rams offense tied for second in scoring average (32.3 points per game) and ranked second in total offense (439.9 total yards per game), having scored at least 30 points in all but two of their 12 games to that point.

"It was stressful, I know that," said Staley, now the Rams defensive coordinator. "It was a hard week of preparation."

Conversely, McVay and the rest of the Rams offensive coaching staff were gearing up for a Bears defense allowing the fourth-fewest points per game (20.1) and fourth-fewest total yards of offense (317.9), having surrendered 30 or more points three times in 12 games.

Staley and the Bears came away with a 15-6 victory – the first time the Rams did not score an offensive touchdown in a game in the McVay era and just the second time they failed to reach double figures in scoring.

"He basically ruined my night that night," McVay said during a video conference Thursday. "I mean, that was not a good night for us."

That matchup would prove impactful for both in the nearly two years since.

The 6-1 scheme – six defensive linemen, one linebacker – deployed by the Bears resurfaced for the Rams less than two months later against the Patriots in Super Bowl LIII, holding the Rams to 3 points. Staley noticed other schemes were constructed in an attempt to limit L.A.'s high-powered offense following that season.

"I think that what you saw, as much as Sean impacted the league or offensively, what he's done has impacted the game defensively, people engineering an entire defensive structure to try and stop him," Staley said. "It's no easy task when every week you're facing possibly a new defense that's trying to stop you."

By that point, McVay, who called the loss to Chicago "humbling" that night, was forced to adjust an offense that had otherwise been largely unstoppable in Los Angeles' previous 27 regular season games.

Per sharpfootballstats.com, L.A. utilized the 11 personnel grouping – one running back, one tight end and three wide receivers – on a league-high 89 percent of their total plays in 2018.

In 2019, that usage dropped 73 percent, while the use of 12 personnel – one running back, two tight ends and two wide receivers – jumped from eight percent to 21 percent. That grouping is advantageous for a passing attack like the Rams with two tight ends who can create mismatches as receivers, but it also adds an extra blocker closer to help counter the sixth defender along the line of scrimmage.

As for Staley, that 2018 game likely played a role in McVay hiring him earlier this year. Staley also brought some of those concepts from Chicago with him to Los Angeles, and now the Rams practice against them according to wide receiver Robert Woods. That 2018 game also shows up on Staley's "teach tape," or instructional film he uses to help players learn the defense, according to McVay.

One thing Staley has noticed from working around McVay this year is how he takes "full ownership of everything that happens." While Staley knows McVay has been hard on himself about that night, he believes that same ownership of the result continues to make the Rams a better team.

"I think that as a competitor, you're always trying to learn from your experiences," Staley said. "I think that night, he learned a lot about himself. He learned a lot about his team, and I know that after that game, the Rams played really, really well and ended up getting into the playoffs and going to the Super Bowl. I would say that he learned quite well from that night and put his team in a position to be successful."

Bearing in mind flaws of offense, Rams' Jared Goff takes aim at Chicago's defense

I think the run game can be successful vs the Bears' defense. They're good, and they're fast, but if McVay goes north/south for the most part with his run game I expect them to have a good day.

One thing that the line will struggle with IMO is getting second level blocks on Roquan (who is slippery as well as fast). I would like to see them take a page from Shanny's playbook and use the TE on him on plays where the goal is threatening the edge. Basically the 9ers have their TEs line up end of the formation and take a few steps forward then turn and impede the flow of the interior. Can't do it all the time but in certain defensive looks it works.

Rams need this win IMO. It's as big a game as you can have midseason and if they make the playoffs (which I assume they will right now) they're gonna see Chicago again.

Interesting plays

During the game, my memory of this play was Goff had pressure and threw early....

The stills don’t seem to show that.
I think you may be right about him throwing it early. I don't really have a good grasp of when a throw should ideally be up for a given route though so sort of avoided that (I make enough assumptions watching film lol). But I thought the same thing.

Nice thing here is that the line pass protected so well throughout this game which is a massive improvement on last season. Game 2 vs SF last season McVay had to run a thousand boots it seemed to keep his QB safe. Not in this game though. Lost in what was a terrible result were more indicators our line has made enormous progress.

First Look: Rams host Bears on Monday Night Football

First Look: Rams host Bears on Monday Night Football

Following a tough loss to the 49ers on Sunday Night Football, the Rams (4-2) will look to bounce back at home against the Bears (5-1) on Monday Night Football. Kickoff from SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, is scheduled for 5:15 p.m. pacific time on ESPN.

In advance of the contest, here is your first look at Rams-Bears on Oct. 26 presented by Cedars-Sinai, including notable Bears additions, some of Chicago's top statistical performers in Week 6 and key storylines:

Notable Bears additions
  • Traded their compensatory fourth-round pick to the Jaguars for quarterback Nick Foles in March. Incumbent Mitch Trubisky initially won the competition for the starting job at the end of training camp, but after Foles took over for Trubisky and rallied the Bears from a 16-point deficit to a 30-26 win over the Falcons in Week 3, head coach Matt Nagy named Foles the permanent starter. Foles has completed 62.5 percent of his pass attempts for 878 yards with six touchdowns and four interceptions.
  • Activated kicker Cairos Santos from the practice squad in early September. After battling a groin injury during training camp, second-year starter Eddy Pineiro landed on injured reserve and forced Chicago to promote Santos. With Pineiro still on IR, Santos has made 10 of 12 field goal attempts and all 12 of his extra point attempts.
Top Performers in Week 6

Foles completed 23 of 39 pass attempts for 198 yards with one touchdown and one interception in the Bears' 23-16 win over the Panthers.

RB David Montgomery paced Chicago's backfield with 19 carries for 58 yards, adding four receptions for 39 yards for nearly 100 yards from scrimmage.

WR Allen Robinson led all Bears receivers with 53 yards on five receptions.TE Jimmy Graham also finished with five receptions, adding 34 yards, but it was another TE – rookie Cole Kmet – who was on the receiving end of Foles' lone touchdown pass last week.

LB Roquon Smith led Chicago's defense with 12 combined tackles, while safeties Tashaun Gipson and DeAndre Houston-Carson each recorded an interception.

On special teams, Santos made all three of his field goal attempts (long of 55) and both of his extra point attempts in the victory.

Early storylines to watch, and what they mean for the Rams

Like the Rams, the Bears have found different ways to win early on this season. Most of those breaks were self-created, some the result of failed execution by the opposing team:
  • In Week 1, Trubisky's go-ahead 27-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Anthony Miller clinched the 27-23 victory and a 17-point second-half comeback over the Detroit Lions.
  • In Week 2, Santos missed a 50-yard field goal with 2:02 remaining, setting up the Giants at their own 40. The Giants reached the Bears 10-yard line, and the Bears managed to hold on for a 17-13 win after an incomplete pass at the goal line and offensive pass interference penalty against the Giants as time expired.
  • In Week 3, Foles' three fourth-quarter touchdown passes rallied them from a 16-point third quarter deficit to beat the Falcons 30-26.
  • In Week 4, Robinson's 16-yard touchdown catch with 1:35 left pulled the Bears within eight of the Colts, but their comeback fell short when the Colts recovered the ensuing onside kick.
  • In Week 5, Santos' go-ahead 38-yard field goal with 1:17 left, combined with Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady appearing to forget the down count on their ensuing series, helped Chicago hang on for a 20-19 win over Tampa Bay.
  • Last week, Houston-Carson's interception with 92 seconds remaining stalled the Panthers' potential game-tying drive and preserved a 23-16 Bears victory.
All told, each of Chicago's first six games have been a one-possession game decided by eight or fewer points.

For the Rams, starting fast and taking care of the football become increasingly important this week given how the Bears can create opportunistic turnovers defensively. Considering Chicago can also rally quickly from double-digit deficits offensively, this also could end up being a game that requires some timely takeaways created by Los Angeles' defense similar to what was seen in the first five weeks.

Well, I’ve slept on it and I still don’t quite know where to start...

I'm not so worried about Goff and the offense. I think they will be fine for the most part this season. They will have their moments where they struggle. But overall I think they will be just fine. Better than last season.

I am worried about the defense though. Everyone knew the 49ers were not gonna put too much on their QB. Most passes were the short, safe type of throws designed to protect a struggling QB. It was like a coach calling everything conservative for a new QB. Shoulda been easy to defend. Rams defense never adjusted. And they sure missed a lot of tackles. Missed tackles were not something new either. That is a concern.

Stupidity & Power Tools

Worst thing I had yet was once when using my brad nailer. I was holding two pices of wood together with my left hand and I fired a nail in and it went sideways somehow and right through my thumb. The worst part was taking it out. Had to slide it like an inch through my thumb. Luckily it missed any bone and was just a flesh wound.
Been there w/ a faulty brad gun that would fire 2 in succession. 2nd one hit the first and went through the finger. You are right about the pain taking it off the brad. But it also hurt like hell, the next few days.

POLL: What Do You Do After a Rams Loss to a Divisional Rival

None of the above. Reflect on the game and decide what it means. Wins and losses are very fluky (cough Bills game cough) - how you play is more important.

This loss just didn't bother me that much. It helps that with the Niners schedule, they're done. But we played absolutely awful and it was just a one TD game, which tells me that were better than the Niners

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