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GRob is a bust, I am sorry to say, and I am that fan who always felt he would figure it out. Had big hopes for the guy, but he's never going to be the LT we were hoping we drafted at 2 overall. Dude looks like he's sleep walking on many plays, his balance and footwork are garbage, and most importantly there are very few of the flash plays we should be seeing from a guy with his physical gifts with him at least blowing DL out in the run game. He's a JAG plain and simple.
I'm all for the Rams moving him inside, but that needs to come with a benching and placement at the bottom of the roster, where he has to work his way up to starting. I would not give that dude anything. Make him earn it.
He might be JAG but at the moment he is our BEST guy at LT. Anyone else (minus a fully healthy Saffold from four or five years back) is a downgrade. I know its disappointing he hasnt' become what we thought he would, but he is young and he has improved from flat-out bust to JAG. Him becoming JAG is a good thing? I agree with you there; its very sad.
TJ McDonald, Kenny Britt, Brian Quick, Chase Reynolds & Cam Thomas can all take a walk.
CAP cut Saffold, Barnes, Sims, Mason
Hit the road :
Rhaney, Keenum, Pace Murphy
2017 Free Agency :
LT - Matt Kalil (short term 'prove-it deal' coming off IR)
LG - Ron Leary
WR - Alshon Jeffery
DE - Dion Jordan (another inexpensive rotational IR bargain)
DT - Abry Jones (rotation behind Brockers)
2017 Draft :
1) N/A
2) C/OG - Ethan Pocic, LSU or Pat Elflein, Oh.St
3) OG/OT - Zach Banner, USC
4) CB - Chidobe Awuzie, Co.
5) S - Jonathan Ford, Aub.
6) WR - Travin Dural, LSU
2017 O-Line :
LT - Kalil
LG - Leary
C - Pocic
RG - GRob
RT - Havenstein
I been doing a lot of thinking on the possible Harbaugh hire. At first I really hated the idea of his crying antics on the sidelines. But he even turned around the wolverines quickly. So I will just have to suck it up if he becomes our next HC. Lets hope we get a GM (assuming Snead doesn't come back) that can get turned around and be able to handle Harbaugh and coexist for a long time!
It just seems where ever he goes he simply just wins, and WTF I could use a few wins.
I'm just getting sick of the best time of the year being black Monday when coaches get canned and hires start being reported.
All I want for Christmas is a great tandem of GM and HC. Sprinkle in a few great hires on the staff
The Winners and Losers From NFL Week 14 The playoff race heats up, but one contender looks nothing like its former self The Ringer
(Getty Images)
Winner: The Playoff Race
Rodger Sherman: Guys, there’s an actual exciting football thing happening this year. I know, I know, we’ve heard so many times how the NFL is self-destructing with bad ratings and bad games and 30,000 other things. But with three weeks left in the regular season, it looks like we’re headed for a weird and wonderful finale.
In the NFC, we have five teams within one game of the final wild-card spot, and all five of them won Sunday. These are interesting teams! The Falcons score and allow thousands of points per game. (Though Sunday, they only gave up points to the lifeless Rams in garbage time.)
The Bucs haven’t been good in a few eons, but now Jameis Winston really seems like he was worth that no. 1 pick. Washington’s an adventure, since Kirk Cousins can throw a touchdown or pick-six on pretty much every play.
The Packers are dangerous if Aaron Rodgers plays well — and he played pretty damn well Sunday against the Seahawks. I, um, well, I guess I don’t have anything nice to say about the Vikings right now, but I like purple uniforms. And if the Giants lose Sunday night, they’ll be 8–5, and we’ll have six teams in this mix.
In the AFC, things are just as tight. Wins by the Texans, Dolphins, Titans, and Steelers coupled with a loss by the Broncos mean we have six teams between 8–5 and 7–6, with two division titles and two Wild Card spots at stake. We’re going to see Antonio Brown and Von Miller balling out and shaking their pelvises with playoff berths up for grabs. We get to find out if Joe Flacco is elite.
We get to see Marcus Mariota arguing that no, he was worth that no. 1 pick. We get to make fun of Brock Osweiler’s contract while he tries to get his team into the playoffs. And, I, um, well, I guess I don’t have anything nice to say about the Dolphins right now, and I don’t really like their uniforms either.
After a season defined by mediocrity, it looks like we might be able to avoid a .500 team in the playoffs. There’s potential drama, and the contestants are playing their best football of the year. (Vikings excepted.) This is good. Football is good, even if we’ve been told 30,000 reasons why it isn’t.
Loser: The Art of Quarterbacking
Danny Kelly: The NFL is a quarterback’s league. Quarterbacks have established themselves as the most important and most handsomely paid position group, and they’re passing for more yards and more touchdowns than ever before. But while inclement weather was a factor, quarterbacks had a bad early-game Sunday slate. Very bad.
Ben Roethlisberger threw a pair of picks in the first half in snowy Buffalo, then added another in the second half. Tyrod Taylor got in on the action, tossing a pass directly to Pittsburgh corner Artie Burns. Carson Wentz threw a bad pick in the end zone.
(Getty Images)
Both Brock Osweiler and Andrew Luck threw first-half interceptions in Indy. On the Colts’ first second-half possession, Luck added another on a throw back toward the middle of the field he made while running to his left. Philip Rivers threw up a prayer in Carolina and was deservedly picked off. Robert Griffin III, making his first start since Week 1, also coughed the ball up … on a flea-flicker … from the end zone.
Kirk Cousins threw an ill-advised pass from deep in his own end that was picked and returned for a touchdown. Matt Stafford must have felt left out: He threw two second-half picks against the Bears, including this terrible throw — nearly identical to Cousins’s — that Cre’Von LeBlanc returned for six.
And, in rainy Miami, Carson Palmer threw two ugly interceptions in the first half and Ryan Tannehill added one of his own.
Loser: The Seattle Seahawks
Sherman: The Seahawks have been good for a while. Sunday, they were excessively bad. Russell Wilson threw a career-high five picks, though some were the fault of his receivers. A week after Earl Thomas broke his leg against the Panthers, the vaunted Seahawks defense watched Aaron Rodgers pass all over them, letting him go 18-for-23 with three touchdowns, good for the highest passer rating any QB has ever had against Pete Carroll’s Seahawks.
The 38–10 beatdown was the Seahawks’ first loss by more than 10 points since October 30, 2011, when Tarvaris Jackson was Seattle’s starter and Leon Washington led the team in rushing.
We’re supposed to consider the Seahawks a title contender because they’re the Seahawks, but this season hasn’t been the same. Wilson has looked iffy at times, the offensive line is a sieve, and the defense lacks some of the boom it used to have. Sunday, all of those things showed up on the same afternoon.
The Seahawks have won enough games to basically ensure them a playoff spot at this point, especially since their competition in the NFC West is made up of the surprisingly sucky Cardinals, an offensively inept Rams team that’s awful even by Jeff Fisher’s standards, and the 49ers’ death rattle echoing through an empty billion-dollar stadium. But seeing the team fire on zero cylinders Sunday makes it seem as if these Seahawks aren’t as potent as the title contenders of years past.
Winner: Le’Veon Bell Fantasy Owners
Donnie Kwak: The Bills hadn’t allowed more than 82 yards to a rusher in six weeks. Then came Bell. The Steelers RB ran 38 times for 236 yards and three touchdowns in Pittsburgh’s 27–20 win, and added four catches for 62 yards — nearly 50 points in non-PPR leagues, the highest single-game fantasy performance thus far this season. It was Bell’s first career three-rushing-TD game.
(Getty Images)
Afterwards, he said he loved playing in the Buffalo snow, which reminded him of playing as a kid on Christmas Day. The forecast doesn’t look great for Pittsburgh’s next game, in Cincinnati. Bengals beware.
Loser: Josh Huff
Michael Baumann: In a test case for the Law of “If RedZone Shows You a Special Teams Play, You Know It’s Going to Be Good,” Tampa Bay kick returner Josh Huff shuffled in front of a rolling football near his own goal line, intending to pick it up and run with it rather than take a certain touchback.
But because footballs are shaped weirdly, this one bounced up at the last second, hit Huff in the face, and rolled in a straight line about 25 feet before going out of bounds inches from the goal line. The Bucs had to start their next drive on the half-yard line and Doug Martin immediately got swarmed in the end zone for a safety.
World-class, professional athletes failing to complete simple tasks is funny. People getting hit in the face is funny. But the bounces that ball took — first to hit Huff in the face, then to roll out of bounds short of the end zone — represent a truly incredible confluence of events. I bet if you lined up two world-class soccer players — one to kick the ball, one to head it out of bounds at the 1-yard line — they wouldn’t be able to replicate that play in 1,000 tries.
And then consider that this was Huff’s first play in a Buccaneers uniform. The Bucs just promoted Huff — whom the Eagles cut last month after he racked up a litany of legal issues related to a DUI stop on the Walt Whitman Bridge — from the practice squad. That kickoff was the first time he touched the ball, and he couldn’t even get his hands on it. The Bucs would win, 16–11. But between the safety and the ensuing Saints field goal drive, Huff cost Tampa bay five points before he even got his hands on a football.
Winner: Matt Barkley’s NFL Career
Kevin Clark: Teams are judged on a sliding scale. If the Patriots can’t put away a bad team until the fourth quarter, they’ll get ripped. For the Bears, anything above “absolute trash performance” is a rousing success, and we saw that on Sunday. The “star” (remember, sliding scale) was Barkley, who was downright decent despite the Bears’ 20–17 loss to the Detroit Lions.
Barkley came very close to actually winning or tying the game, but was ultimately undone by a comically inept offensive line which canceled out two Barkley darts with holding penalties. On the day, Barkley was 20-of-32 for 212 yards and a touchdown. And he made some pretty good throws:
Barkley was considered a last resort for the Bears, but he’s making the case that he should at least be in the conversation for a competition, in Chicago or otherwise. He is a restricted free agent after this season. After flaming out in Philadelphia and Arizona, it seemed like Barkley was working his way out of the league. Now? He’s not a total disaster — and in Chicago that’s good enough.
Loser: Robert Griffin III
Sherman: RG3 hurt his shoulder in Week 1, and some thought he could miss the entire season. But he worked and rehabbed and worked and rehabbed and eventually fought his way back to join the team in December …
… Only to find the Browns were 0–12, the fans were gone, Ohio was frozen, and nobody cared whether the team won or lost. In fact, I’d bet some people would be fine with the Browns losing out to ensure they get the no. 1 pick.
There are so many reasons not to run a flea-flicker from your own 1-yard line. It’s such a boom-or-bust play — it could end in a touchdown, but it is more likely to result in an enormous sack or an interception. And if one of those second two things happen, you’re giving up a safety or extremely short field.
But when you’re 0–12 — as the Browns were entering Sunday’s 23–10 loss to the Bengals — nobody cares. Run the world’s dumbest play. Throw the ball into triple coverage. Man, just do whatever you feel like. Take a nap on the field. Get drunk in the instant-replay booth.
There is no point, which is why if I was RG3, I would have just told everybody I was hurt. There’s no use working hard and risking reinjury if the football is as pointless as this.
Winner: Bryce Petty
Baumann: The Jets have found their quarterback of the fut — [falls out of chair laughing with tears streaming down cheeks] — oh, I was so close to getting that whole sentence out with a straight face.
But think of it this way: Petty showed a lot of perseverance. His first pass of the game was picked off, the Jets fell behind 14–0 in the first four minutes of the game, and Carlos Hyde ran for 141 first-half yards against a defense that not only looked like it didn’t want to be there, but moved like it was wading through a vat of corn syrup. Which is understandable — being stuck in a vat of corn syrup sounds unpleasant.
And what a vat of corn syrup it was. Shots of all the empty seats at Levi’s Stadium circulated not in service of attendance-shaming, but in awe of the survival instincts of 49ers fans, who knew they would be better off just not showing up.
Because if they had, they would have been force-fed the bland, viscous, lukewarm mush that only two bad NFL teams can provide. Then, when the clock finally reached zero, their tormentors would’ve shoved the funnel back in, cackled, “Overtime, suckers!” and started pouring again.
But full credit to Petty, who managed to throw 34 passes after the interception without turning the ball over (which is harder than it looks — just ask Russell Wilson), a couple of which rookie Robby Anderson snagged for big gains.
Petty also ably handed the ball off to Bilal Powell 29 times, including on the game-winning touchdown. It was a perfectly mediocre quarterbacking performance, which will come as a pleasant surprise to however many Jets fans haven’t suffered some sort of apoplexy over the team wrecking its draft position with the 23–17 victory.
Loser: Harry Douglas
Clark: Almost every football hit leaves room for debate. Every face mask and helmet-to-helmet knock can usually be, if you want to be generous, explained away as being the product of an ultrafast game and the heat of the moment. Then, rarely, there are hits like this, when everyone agrees you are acting like an asshole:
Kwak: Both of Washington’s starting wideouts are pending free agents this offseason, and it is DeSean Jackson who is getting most of the sports-talk angst, especially with a rumor this week that he may return to Philly. Sunday, as is his wont against his former team, Jackson had a flashy day — three catches for 102 yards, including an 80-yard bomb from Kirk Cousins in the third quarter of Washington’s 27–22 win.
However, it is Garçon who the Redskins may miss more. Garçon had a typically workmanlike stat line — five catches for 59 yards and a score — but it was his 6-yard grab on fourth-and-1 with 2:59 left that kept the Redskins alive, both in this must-win game and in the NFC playoff race. Garçon may not have the breakneck speed or the highlight-reel plays, but his clutchness makes him Washington’s real no. 1 receiver.
Loser: The Denver Broncos, Playoff Team
Clark: The Broncos should not have lost footing in the AFC playoff race on Sunday. They played a Tennessee team barely interested in scoring. Marcus Mariota had 88 yards through the air. Trevor Siemian had 334. A 13–10 slugfest is the type of game the Broncos dream of. And yet, they screwed it up. Two fumbles, a lack of a coherent run game, and overall inept execution led to a bizarre loss that was made worse by what happened in Miami.
The Dolphins lost Ryan Tannehill for the game (at the very least) against Arizona and looked cooked — but backup Matt Moore led the game-winning drive to give the Dolphins a crucial win in the AFC playoff picture. The Broncos now have an uphill battle to make the playoffs. And this is not because the AFC is particularly good.
Heavens, no. It’s because the Broncos haven’t been executing the formula that got them into the playoff hunt to begin with: a defense that will keep scores low, and an offense that needs to make some scoring plays. The latter hasn’t happened enough lately. The Broncos have the Patriots next. Good luck.
Winner: The Titans’ Balance
Kelly: Marcus Mariota has put together an excellent season for Tennessee — his efficiency in the red zone, his versatility as a runner, and his ability to run the Titans’ pro-style, play-action heavy offense under Mike Mularkey has been a big reason they’re contending for the playoffs in the AFC South — but on a day when he didn’t look his best, Tennessee’s physical run game and suffocating defense picked up the slack.
Mariota completed just six passes for 88 yards against a swarming, aggressive Broncos pass defense, so the Titans leaned heavily on DeMarco Murray and Derrick Henry to move the football.
Tennessee ran the ball 42 times for 180 yards and a touchdown — Murray contributed 92 yards and a touchdown on 21 totes, and Henry added 42 yards on 12 carries — and the Titans bend-but-don’t-break defensive strategy worked against Trevor Siemian, who passed for 334 yards but found the end zone just once. Meanwhile, Denver’s run game was nonexistent; the Broncos carried the ball nine times for just 18 yards.
For the Titans, it was the definition of a team win, and they proved that they have a multitude of ways to beat you, whether it’s Mariota’s arm, their exotic smashmouth run game, or their stout defense. Tennessee moves to 7–6 to keep pace with the Texans in the AFC South, who beat the Colts on Sunday.
Winner: Long Snapper Awareness
Sherman: Long snappers have a job that’s very different from anybody else’s, and they get injured so rarely that no other players really practice the position. When one does get hurt, it can be disastrous. Emergency long snappers have cost teams games in recent years.
His snap wasn’t accurate and it knuckled, preventing holder Donnie Jones from getting it down for Caleb Sturgis’s kick. Instead of scoring three points, Philadelphia gave Washington a short field, which the Redskins used to score a touchdown.
And then Celek got hurt! The Eagles did not have a backup backup plan. LB Mychal Kendricks and TE Trey Burton quickly auditioned for the job of third-string long snapper, with Burton eventually winning. His attempt at snapping wasn’t great, but it was good enough to let Jones get a hold down.
The Eagles eventually found themselves trailing 27–22 in the game’s closing minutes, and got all the way down to the Washington 14. If it hadn’t been for Celek’s bad snap, the game might have been 27–25, and the Eagles might have been able to attempt a game-winning field goal. Instead, they needed to try for a touchdown, and Carson Wentz got strip-sacked.
You might not know your team’s long snapper’s name. But just hope he doesn’t get hurt.
That's the key. McDaniels tried to install that with Bradford, and it might have been successful if they had even a semblance of an off-season to work on it, but it's also predicated on using smart receivers. Everyone can attest to the fact that NE doesn't often employ freak athlete receivers to make their offense work. Just guys who know the ins and outs of the system and where they have to be at any given moment. If they do their job, and the QB does his, then separation is something that just happens organically. So in that respect, yes. It would be a good system to use here. But I'm not entirely sold on the idea that this particular group of receivers are as studios as you'd want in order to maximize its effectiveness.
i haven't missed a televised game in 20 years. I've come close to missing them but it somehow always worked.
Today, that changes and I feel bad cause I've considered trying to get out of my plans--those being the funeral of my Cousin. My 24 year old cousin was killed in the Valley Park area when being a passenger in a vehicle driven by a drunk woman--hitting a tree and being ejected.
It's a shame, and it's sad, but he got in the car with someone drunk driving, so I am struggling a little to feel the sympathy on that end. The part I feel bad about is the woman driving just left him laying there dead....
Either way, all week I've been back and forth about missing this, but my wife is kinda being an ass and making me go. (She is so much a better person than me)
Maybe I will be the bad luck charm that goes away. I'm not sure that I could watch a recorded sport program, I would just fast forward it. I look forward to seeing a celebrating thread rather than a venting one. Go Rams! I will be watching in spirit...or if I can sneak away and find a tv somewhere in the funeral home.(ugh I'm going to hell)
Hey I'm sorry to hear that your cousin died. Even though you say you weren't close I think your focus should be with your family at times like this. Even if the Rams were playing in the Super Bowl the thought of missing a dumb football game should be minuscule. Props to your wife for making you go
This is his fourth, but you are absolutely correct.
Two tough D's (Miami & NE), and this is his 2nd weak D, NO was the other. It's cold and damp out in LA today....So, if he can't throw with a wet ball....Or if the receivers can't catch a damp ball...
Nice photos...Turf toe is usually caused by ill-fitted shoes (too large). That is, the extra space in front of the big toe in a shoe...where the toe jams into the inside front of the shoe when an athlete comes to a sudden stop...causing the joint to bend in any number of angles.
What's your guess on Julio's effectiveness? I'd guess he doesn't play...
Tavon should just be a PR and a HB/screen pass guy. He's a borderline terrible conventional wide receiver . Higbee is still a rookie. If after 6 years he's dropping this many then he's gotta go too.
Please sir, I beg you.... Delete that. That is a bad, bad omen to be posting on a Rams forum. I want Goff to be as successful as "that guy" more than anyone... But please take that pic down. "That guy" did more to destroy the Rams than any QB ever. Tis sacrilege to post his image in comparison to our hopeful savior. I plead with you again sir. Take. It. Down.
I suppose I have to expect this from some Horns fans. However, as someone who followed Joe since he was a scrawny underclassman at Notre Dame, continually coming in to bail out the starting QB's with come-from-behind victories, I consider this to be an honor. I so badly wanted the Horns to draft this guy, but he was probably overlooked by them and most everyone else because he was deemed too small for the pro game. There are '9er players I never cared for very much, but I never felt even the slightest tinge of hate for Joe.
Rams Head Coach Jeff Fisher – Post Practice – December 9, 2016
(Opening Remarks)
“You heard form Jared – he’s doing well. Bounced back, had a good day. That’s encouraging. We didn’t see you guys yesterday, but he came in and spent most of the day here – spent a lot of time with (C) Tim Barnes. He’s caught up and he feels good – it’s encouraging. We got (WR) Tavon (Austin) back, (DE) Rob (Quinn) practiced as well. (Benny (Cunningham) did not practice. We have him doubtful for the game. (Malcolm (Brown) had a really good week – we’ll be in good shape there. Hope to get Benny back next week.”
(On the recent reaction to his comments about GM Les Snead’s contract extension and whether he’s been aware of the reaction)
“Yeah. Things were brought to my attention yesterday. If you go back and look at the transcripts, I was speaking the truth. Honestly, I don’t know where this came from. Les and I have been on the same page since day one
We communicate all the time, we work together, we make decisions together and I don’t know where it’s coming from – I’ll find out. In our business, unnamed sources, they’re not good. If we’ve got sources within the organization that are speaking, then we’ll address it. But there are no issues between Les and I – by no means. We agree to disagree and we’ve had a fun run, but we’re certainly disappointed – as I said on Tuesday – in the outcome and where we are. We’ve got work to do, but we’re doing it together.”
(On hearing terms like a ‘junior high atmosphere’ or ‘toxic’)
“That came from either the editor or the writer, but I didn’t think the ‘junior high’ thing came from an unnamed source. But again, I don’t pay as close attention to those things as you do because I’m more concerned about the Falcons. But I’ll just say this again, Les and I are fine. We work together. We talk every day. I don’t know where that’s coming from.”
(On whether he and Snead have spoken about the aftermath of his comments)
“Yeah, Les and I did. I took the transcripts and I gave it to Les. Then, I took the article and I said ‘how do you connect the dots’ – you can’t connect the dots. Somebody said that we ‘don’t pad our practices’ – we padded on Wednesday. So whoever is talking obviously has not been out to practice or does not understand the CBA (NFL Collective Bargaining Agreement). Enough is enough, Les and I are good, we’re all good. Our focus is on Atlanta right now.”
(On whether there is any concern for him regarding the unnamed source within the organization and that they have that sort of impression about the relationship between himself and Snead)
“I don’t know. When you’re 4-8, people are frustrated, you know, they’re frustrated. We’ll find out where it’s coming from.”
(On having two games within four days of each other and how the team prepares for a quick turnaround like that)
“On Monday, we had two games in 11 days – we’re getting down to it. Our focus is on the Falcons. We’ll have a brief meeting tomorrow before we come out for our walk-thru and I’ll just go through the schedule with them. It’s about getting your bodies back, restoring, hydrating, and recovering – that’s what we’re going to do.
We’ll come back Sunday here after the game and the coaches will start game planning – you want to park in the parking lot, we’ll probably all be here Sunday night (laughs). That’s just the nature of the Thursday games and travel. Since we’ve been here, we have not had a Thursday Night Football away game – we’ve been at home, fortunately. It’s a different challenge, but we’ll educate the players and communicate with them – give them the schedule tomorrow because the unknown is hard on players and they need to know.
Immediately after the Atlanta game we will start focusing on Seattle and getting their bodies back. It’s going to be a short week, quick week. I’ll refer to last night that was a good ball game last night – both teams played well in difficult conditions. We have to get ourselves back, travel and ready to play against Seattle.”
Rams Defensive Coordinator Gregg Williams – Post-Practice – December 9, 2016
(On the challenge that Falcons QB Matt Ryan and WR Julio Jones present)
“Arguably the top receiver in the league, he’s right up there with a lot of the really good ones we’ve played this year. Everybody, now in the National Football League, they put an investment in those kind of guys that can score points. He’s had some very, very impressive days this year. And again, he came in the league when I was still in that division, so I know some of the things about him from being in that division.
He’s matured well and hopefully we’ll see if we can play some of the same, similar things we’ve been able to do against some of the other really big-time receivers we have. He’s done a very, very good job adapting to (Falcons offensive coordinator) Kyle Shanahan’s offense. I think Kyle’s done a great job on how he’s utilized him, too. They’re having a good year on offense. Matt, at the quarterback position – I was down there, too, in that division when he first came into the league. He’s grown each and every year and he really has taken it to the next level this year with Kyle Shanahan’s offense and he’s doing a great job.”
(On if you can tell the chemistry when a quarterback and wide receiver have been together for a while like Ryan and Jones)
“Yeah, you can tell the chemistry. You can tell the things that they do where, really, there’s no hand signals, there’s just eye movements, there’s just nods. And there is a feel that they trust each other in the spaces on the field. You’ll see the ball being thrown in to space before the breaker curves – and that’s the trust that you have of going and practicing and playing with somebody rep after rep after rep. So, yeah, you’ll see that on film and hopefully we can disrupt some of that, we’ll see.”
(On what he means by saying Matt Ryan has gone to the next level)
“He understands the offense, he understands what they way out of him offensively. At this point in time in the league, there’s only so many disguises you can do – with (Patriots QB Tom Brady, (Saints QB Drew Brees, Matt, those kinds of guys, is that they’ve seen every disguise known to man.
Hopefully we can have some fractions of time, involvement, on how we, maybe, cause him to freeze a little bit and then hopefully our rush can get there. But he does a very good job with that. Again, each time a coordinator changes with him, he’s been able to adapt to that coordinator – and that coordinator has also kind of kept some things along the years that Matt likes to do.
And I’ve seen that with whoever has come in down there, because you can see he has his impact on, ‘I like this route concept, I like it in this area of the field.’ They’re still doing some of the similar things they were doing when (former Falcons offensive coordinator) Dirk (Koetter) was there. He’s doing it quite effectively, he really is.”
(On how DB Mike Jordan has developed)
“He’s done great, I love the kid. Again, I take great pride on coaching young men that other people don’t like. Here he was, an undrafted free agent, I take a lot of pride in the undrafted free agents that can play in this league. He’s here for a reason, we saw some qualities in him for a reason to get here. But the young man has not backed away from any challenge.
And then once a kid shows, maybe, that he is going to have a chance, then he has to deal with me and dealing with me on putting more and more and more pressures on him because I don’t want to see him fold on game day,
I want to see him fold in practice. The water has just kind of flowed off his back – whatever I’ve given him, he’s done a good job with that. And then we’ve adapted some things, schematically, to fit his skillset, too. I think (defensive backs coach) Dennard (Wilson) has done a great job, his coach, has done a really, really good job on getting him ready to go in a short amount a time. And he’s done well on special teams, too.”
(On how his years in the NFC South helps him this Sunday against Matt Ryan)
“Just a familiarity on timing. I understand what throws that he is qualified to make – sometimes you go into a game and you’re shocked that a guy has this arm strength or you’re shocked that he can move that quickly out of the pocket. Once you’ve been on the field with him, in a stressful situation, you can see when he can improvise and when he can’t improvise.
That part of it, because I’ve been on the field with him, nothing that will surprise me. I’ve seen him do some pretty good things before. A lot of times, we can convey that to our guys, hopefully it’ll be an advantage.”
Rams QB Jared Goff – Post Practice – December 9, 2016
(On how he’s feeling)
“Better, really good. It was a little one day deal. A little stomach deal, it’ll be fine though. Fatigued me a little bit, but I’m good.”
(On how he felt in practice after coming off a day of rest)
“Good, yeah, real good. I think yesterday, I was able to regroup and get back to myself, and then today felt normal.”
(On how difficult the preparation becomes after missing a day of practice)
“Obviously, I wanted to (practice). I wanted to get all the work in and do what we do here in practice. But, physically was unable to. I watched the film. (QB Case (Keenum) did a good job, and I was able to get some good reps mentally.”
(On if he came in on Thursday)
“I was here Thursday. I was fine Thursday morning. I was here yesterday, basically all day just trying to get caught up.”
(On if he’s ever played a college game while being sick, and if he’s ever had to fight through it)
“I don’t think so. I’ve played games before though in other sports where I’ve been sick, and football. But, not in college.”
(On if he sees this game as an opportunity to capitalize on a struggling Falcons defense)
“I don’t think it has anything to do with their defense and what we’re planning to do, or change anything offensively. I think we’re just going to do what we do. We have a good plan coming in. We got a good week of practice in. Today was a really good day, I thought. Got some good work in. We feel confident. Regardless of what they want to do on defense, regardless of what they have done on defense, we feel confident in what we’ve done, and I just want to continue to get better.”
(On what the offense has worked on this week to be more efficient on third down)
“Everything man, everything. A part of it is putting stuff together that will work this weekend. A part of it is us doing our job and executing. We need to do our job on third down, and need to throw completions. We need to protect, we need to run the ball well, and need to catch the ball and everything in between.”
(On how important was the long pass completion to WR Kenny Britt to finally get a deep ball under his belt)
“I wasn’t thinking of it. We were down like 20 something at that point. That was probably the first long completion, aside from the touchdown to (WR) Tavon (Austin) against New Orleans. Again, I wasn’t really thinking of it at the time. It’s a good one to have, but we lost the game. So, it doesn’t really matter.”
(On his tendency to keep his eyes on the rush, in turn, creating more pressure from the defense)
“I’m always working on everything, but I don‘t think that’s something I’ve been looking at really.”
(On how he feels he’s handled the pressure)
“Fine. Yeah, good.”
(On if the game has slowed down for him since becoming the starter)
“Yeah, absolutely. I think the last three games, obviously, that I got under my belt, I’ve been able to get some reps, and some experience. As well as in practice, getting more reps in practice helps as well. This will be my fourth game now, and I expect to continue to progress and continue to get better.”
(On playing in the Coliseum without the rain)
“It’ll be nice. It’ll be my first one there, obviously without the rain. It’ll be fun.”
(On if he feels defense are starting to game plan against him now that he’s had three NFL games under his belt)
“Yeah, they definitely have more stuff to look at that they can probably, try to game plan for. Again, it’s only been three games, so I don’t know how much. But, there’s definitely been a little bit, yeah.”
(On his biggest adjustment to the NFL)
“The speed. Obviously, it’s faster on game day than it is in practice. But, I think that after the Miami game, I was done with that. It felt good against New Orleans, and really felt good against the Patriots. We don’t play well, I didn’t play well in particular. As far as adjustment, speed, and feeling good in the pocket, it felt good. They just did a good job getting pressure. They schemed it up well, and did a good job against us. They’re 10-2 for a reason, and they make the playoffs every year for a reason, and they did a good job against us.”
(On what personal goals he’s set for himself in the final four games)
“Just continue to get better. Continue to be able lead the offense, and be the best quarterback I can be. And continue to get myself prepared for every game.”
Rams RB Todd Gurley – Post-Practice – December 9, 2016
(On how much more he stays after practice this year to catch footballs)
“I did it like every day after practice last year, so about the same.”
(On how much he feels he’s improved as a pass catcher)
“I feel like I’ve been doing a great job when the ball has been thrown to me. I’ve been able to catch it a majority of the time. I’m just trying to make sure that I stay reliable in the pass game.”
(On if he feels encouraged about facing Atlanta’s defense)
“In the league, anything can happen any week, you never know. You’ve got to prepare hard and just go into the game with the mindset that you’re going to have a successful game.”
(On how he personally approaches the final four games of the season)
“Obviously, we’re kind of in the same position we were in last year, I think we were probably the same record – just try to finish strong. Go in to the offseason feeling good about yourself, knowing we finished on a good little streak. Hopefully we can pull these last four games off and get some momentum going into the offseason, feeling good about yourself, then coming back into OTAs.”
(On what it would mean to end the season with 1,000 yards rushing)
“I feel like it would be important to us, as far as the offense just knowing the struggles we’ve been having, it’s still a good accomplishment. At the end of the day, we’re looking for wins. Definitely, the big boys up front definitely want to get that for me for sure. They’re definitely going to be working.”
(On how it feels with three of the last four games at home)
“Feels good, finally. I feel like we’ve been on the road like every week. Definitely feels good not to be traveling. Then next week we only go two and a half hours up North, so it’s not bad.”
(On how he feels he’s improved in pass-protection over the last season and a half)
“I feel like I’ve been just doing a pretty good job. Obviously, I don’t go to the special teams meetings, so I’m able to be in there doing the pass-protection meetings, the extra two or three times a week. I feel like I’ve been doing a pretty good job, obviously missed a few this year, but I feel like I’ve been doing a good job and the coaches have been doing a good job. The quarterbacks, too, of just helping me, helping everybody understand the protections.”
JJ, D. Stewart, Long...oh, you probably meant offensive players...Does Richie Incognito count? Hmmmm...Not one...the WR that went to Miami...Signed a big deal...And Danny A. How about the TE? Illinois mIke? Dude with the long name...oh Snisher didn't draft them....You may have a point....Get rid of B. Quick this offseason, and I'll have a lil better insight.
Good try but those guys don't fit the criteria of the discussion we were having. Fisher Snead draft choices that did not produce with the Rams but went somewhere else and did.