• To unlock all of features of Rams On Demand please take a brief moment to register. Registering is not only quick and easy, it also allows you access to additional features such as live chat, private messaging, and a host of other apps exclusive to Rams On Demand.

Special teams have turned it around

I don't have the statistical breakdown, there are guys here much better for that, but it's easy to see that the Rams Special Teams have taken a big jump in the last few weeks, especially the return game with Brandon Powell.

Powell's been very, very solid. He had a return Sunday on a monster punt that really didn't get enough attention, imo... 18 yards that helped keep the field pretty short.

Coverage has been very, very solid.

Just feel like we have to acknowledge where there's improvement. This was an area you could really see costing the Rams a playoff game, earlier this season.. .but now it feels like an area of strength.

  • Poll Poll
Pete or Russell? Poll

Pete or Russell? Who Goes

  • Fire Pete

    Votes: 15 26.3%
  • Trade Wilson

    Votes: 5 8.8%
  • Fire Pete and Trade Wilson

    Votes: 19 33.3%
  • Keep Pete and Wilson

    Votes: 8 14.0%
  • Fire Pete and trade Wilson straight up for Sean Mannion

    Votes: 10 17.5%

Just curious what you guys think will happen after the season.
We keep hearing the Wilson trade Rumors, but if I am the owner
of the Hawks..... I am sending Pete and GM packing and doing
everything in my power to bring in a offensive HC that Wilson will
love and build the team into what Wilson has needed for years.
One that can prevent Wilson from being one of most sacked QB's in the league.
No way I'm trading Russell unless it's for a better QB

Rams Power Rankings: Week 18

Rams Power Rankings: Week 18​

Jan 04, 2022 at 08:58 AM
Stu Jackson of the Los Angeles Rams headshot, Thursday, May 20, 2021, in Thousand Oaks, CA. (Jeff Lewis/LA Rams)

Stu Jackson
Staff Writer

Each week, TheRams.com will be taking an aggregate look at where the team ranks in different outlets across the sports media landscape. Here are the power rankings for the Rams heading into Week 18:
220104_PowerRankings_16x9

NFL.com, Dan Hanzus Rank: 2
Last Week: 3
Change: +1
ESPN.com Rank: 4
Last Week: 5

Change: +1
Yahoo! Sports, Frank Schwab Rank: 2
Last Week: 4
Change: +2
Bleacher Report Rank: 4
Last Week: 4
Change: No change

USA Today, Nate Davis Rank: 3
Last Week: 6
Change: +3
Sports Illustrated, MMQB Rank: 7
Last Week: 5
Change: -2
Note: A different member of the MMQB staff compiles their rankings each week; this week, it was staff writer Conor Orr's turn.

CBS Sports, Pete Prisco Rank: 2
Last Week: 4
Change: +2
Washington Post, Mark Maske Rank: 2
Last Week: 4
Change: +2
AVERAGE RANKING: 3.25

HIGH: 2 (Multiple outlets)
LOW: 7 (Sports Illustrated)
BIGGEST CHANGE: +2 (Multiple outlets)
THIS WEEK'S OPPONENT'S RANKS — THE SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS
NFL.com — 12
ESPN.com — 11
Yahoo! Sports — 12

Bleacher Report — 13
USA Today — 14
Sports Illustrated – 13
CBS Sports — 14
The Washington Post — 17

FMIA Peter King: Week 17

Only Rams stuff below btw for entire article see link.


The Lead: Rams Revival​


BALTIMORE — They are the 21 days that should have tried Rams’ souls. Instead, these last 21 days revived Rams’ souls.

Forty players, coaches and football staff—more than any team in the league—tested positive for Covid. Two vital players were sidelined hours before the start of this ramrod schedule: at Arizona, Seattle (delayed two days because of 22 positives that week), at desperate Minnesota, at desperate Baltimore. Because of the Covid spread and the heavy rains in southern California, the team has not had a full, normal practice since early December. With all that, the Rams had to go 4-0 in this stretch to have a realistic chance to pass 10-2 Arizona and be in position to win the division.

Facing the Ravens on Sunday at the big Crabcake, the Rams’ crazy 20-19 win—keyed by superstar acquisitions Von Miller and Odell Beckham Jr.—finished the crazy schedule stretch. The Rams went 4-0. They’ll win the NFC West with either a home win over the Niners this weekend or an Arizona loss to Seattle.

Going 4-0 in that three-week stretch is one of the great accomplishments this season by any NFL team, particularly in the hazy time of the record number of Covid positives. But Christmas Day highlighted a particularly bizarre weekend.

Stalwart left tackle Andrew Whitworth went to bed on Friday night, Christmas Eve, feeling lousy. The team’s head athletic trainer, Reggie Scott, told Whitworth if he didn’t feel good Christmas morning, he should report for 5 a.m. Covid testing at the team facility. Whitworth didn’t sleep much that night, felt feverish, and he knew the team needed him for the Sunday game at Minnesota, and he thought of trying to gut it out. “But I knew the responsible thing with this outbreak running through our team was to test and try to slow it down,” he said.

Los Angeles Rams v Baltimore Ravens
Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford and teammates. (Getty Images)

Whitworth’s first three rapid-test swabs in the 5 a.m. test were positive. He was out for Sunday. His backup, Joe Noteboom, had been out with Covid, but the Rams felt he was trending in a healthy direction, and he reported for the early test. And just as the Rams buses were about to leave for the trip to Minnesota, Noteboom’s PCR test came back positive.

The third option at left tackle, David Edwards, started. But 18 plays into the game, center Brian Allen got hurt, and the Rams shuffled the line, and undrafted rookie Alaric Jackson moved to left tackle for the last 52 snaps against the Vikings.

Jackson, the Rams’ fourth left tackle, gave up zero sacks and one pressure of Matthew Stafford. Rams 30, Vikings 23.

“The blessing in disguise,” Whitworth said, “over the last three weeks is we’ve got guys playing that never played. We’re relying on guys that we’ve never had to rely on before. There’s almost this adversity, this belief system of anybody can get in there and we can be okay. Then you get your guys back and you start getting stronger and there’s just this bond that’s bigger than whether or not one guy can do it. It’s made us have this little resolve that maybe we didn’t have as early in the year. We were a good team, but maybe something was missing. We’re more complete.”

More than that, the Rams are thriving in this ridiculous time. And about 35 of their players, having tested positive in December, now do not have to test through the end of the season, because the NFL gives players who tested positive a 90-day holiday—with a CDC nod of approval—from the testing protocols. More than half of the roster is free of the testing burden, and the Covid burden. Think how handy that will be if the Rams advance in the playoffs. Half the roster can practice and play with an uncluttered mind.

“We are playing football, and playing winning football, through the biggest pandemic of our lifetime,” said Scott, the team’s Infection Control Officer. “Today, these four important players are available. Tomorrow, they’re not. Sometimes I just pinch myself. Really, it’s incredible.”

This really was a compelling game. The Ravens have been ravaged by injury and Covid unlike any team in the league. They’re paying 89 players (about 15 above the league average), with about $77 million in 2021 cap money on IR. You could argue the five most important positions on the run-heavy Ravens are QB, RB, LT, CB and CB. The starters at every one of those spots in August—Lamar Jackson, J.K. Dobbins, Ronnie Stanley, Marlon Humphrey, Marcus Peters—were hurt and not dressed Sunday.

These must-win games are stressful enough for the players. But when I asked Baltimore vet Calais Campbell what this year had been like for him, he said, “Stressful. So stressed. Not just the game itself, but doing everything to be available for the game,” he said. “I can’t afford to test positive. My team needs me. So I try to stay at home as much as possible. Even at home, I’ve been masking up, which is so weird. My son’s looking at me like, ‘Why do you have a mask on?’ But it’s crunch time. You just can’t risk it.”

The Rams took similar precautions on their trip east Saturday. The traveling party was cut down to 75 people on a 239-seat charter—the players, by seniority, get the 30 cushy first-class seats that can lay flat—and eight buses take the 75 people to and from the team hotel and stadium. Nine or 10 people per bus seems weird. “It’s tough to have camaraderie the same as always,” Whitworth said, “because everything is designed to separate us. It’s a little isolating.”

The Rams aren’t perfect. Matthew Stafford turned it over three times for the second straight game Sunday; the Rams won’t continue to survive three stunted drives per game in the playoffs. “I hate going over all of these—I’m tired of doing it,” Stafford said in a moment of introspection after the game. The two picks were surprisingly careless, particularly the pick-six by Chuck Clark to open the scoring. It conjures Detroit Lions thoughts, and those can’t continue as the Rams think about seriously contending for the Super Bowl.

But it seems the more the Rams play together, the more they go into a sort of happy survival mode. Vets like Miller and Beckham both seem so happy to be on a contender, and their play reflects it. The two biggest plays in the game were made by the mid-season imports.

Baltimore led 19-14 with 68 seconds left, with the game on the line. The Rams had fourth-and-five at the Ravens’ 12-yard line. For one of the few times all day, the Baltimore crowd sounded like it had so many times in the Ray Lewis days. As Stafford rolled left, his first option was tight end Tyler Higbee, with Cooper Kupp the second. Both covered. Though Beckham was covered tightly coming across the middle, Stafford thought he had a tight window, and with the rush coming, he was running out of time and options. “The ball needed to get there in a hurry,” Stafford said. “I ripped it pretty good. For him to reach out and snatch it and hold onto it, take a big hit in the back, that was huge.” Beckham stretched for the first down. I bet he made it by eight inches. On the next play, Stafford fit it in to Beckham next to the right pylon. For the first time all day, the Rams led.

The Ravens had one last chance, with a first down at the Baltimore 38-yard line and no timeouts left. Miller had been jonesing for a big play all day against Ravens tackle Patrick Mekari because he respects his game, and because he arrived from Denver in trade to make big plays. This time Miller sped by and enveloped quarterback Tyler Huntley for an eight-yard sack. That was the ballgame. “To have A.D. [Aaron Donald] jump on my back, and to have all the guys go crazy, that’s what you play the game for,” Miller said.

You could hear through the door separating the Rams’ locker room and the press-conference room in Baltimore. That was one exultant team late Sunday afternoon. The Rams deserved to let loose. When they took the field in Glendale 21 days earlier, they were 8-4, two games and the tiebreaker behind 10-2 Arizona. And with a week to play, L.A. has a one-game lead, the division title in sight.

Beckham, in particularly, reveled in the Ram rally. “It’s tatted on me,” Beckham said. “ ‘The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands at moments of comfort and convenience, but times of challenge and controversy.’ “ The Rams are measuring up well.

Scouting Cooper Kupp​


As the Rams retained control of first place in the NFC West Sunday with the 20-19 win in Baltimore, the play of wideout Cooper Kupp—who leads all NFL pass-catchers in football in receptions (138), receiving yards (1,829) and touchdowns (15)—continues to be one of the stories of the year in the NFL. He’s trying to become the first receiver since Steve Smith in 2005 to lead the league in all three categories. On Sunday, Kupp became the fourth receiver in history (and in 16 games) to have a season of at least 100 catches, 1,500 yards and 15 touchdowns.

So it’s curious to look back on the 2017 NFL Draft, and to see how Kupp lasted so long. The top receivers picked that year:

Pick 5 overall: Tennessee, Corey Davis, Western Michigan.
7: L.A. Chargers, Mike Williams, Clemson.
9: Cincinnati, John Ross, Washington.
37: Buffalo, Zay Jones, East Carolina.
40: Carolina, Curtis Samuel, Ohio State.
62: Pittsburgh, JuJu Smith-Schuster, USC
69: L.A. Rams, Cooper Kupp, Eastern Washington.

FYI: Chris Godwin went 84th to Tampa, Kenny Golladay 96th to Detroit. How crazy is the draft? With five seasons of evidence, the best wideouts to come out in 2017 were the sixth (Smith-Schuster), seventh (Kupp) and 11th (Godwin) receivers picked.

Two reasons Kupp lasted as long as he did: He ran a 4.62-second 40 time at his Eastern Washington Pro Day. And level of competition rendered his average season of 107 catches and 1,608 yards in four years at Eastern Washington suspect. As one evaluator told me in December: “We didn’t know if he was a MAC receiver, one of those guys who puts up incredible numbers because of level of play.”

The other day, driving home from practice in California, Kupp had this to say about his 40 time:

“The last time I put my hand in the ground and ran a straight-line 40 yards is at the Scouting Combine. It’s just not really conducive to understanding what a receiver has to do, and what’s important to playing the position. That’s the last time I did it, and I don’t plan to do it again, ever.”

But that 40 time, luckily for him, helped him get to the Rams, a team that uses his skills perfectly.

NFL: JAN 02 Rams at Ravens
Rams wide receiver Cooper Kupp and Ravens safety Geno Stone. (Getty Images)

Kupp’s NFL story begins in the summer of 2015 at the Manning Passing Academy in Thibodaux, La., of all places. His grandfather, former NFL guard Jake Kupp, blocked for academy founder Archie Manning during his Saints career, and so Cooper Kupp had an in with the family. Cooper Kupp got to polish his game with some top NFL and college quarterbacks—including Peyton Manning, who, at the time, was preparing for his last NFL season. Rams GM Les Snead, who was a fan of the passing camp, found himself in a staff meeting there one night.

Snead tells the rest of the story: “Peyton’s running this meeting and he’s going over the throws they’re gonna make the next day and which receivers are going to be with which passers. He looked at his brother Eli and he said, ‘Hey Eli, Cooper Kupp’s with me. You figure out who’s with you.’ “

Reminded of the story last week, Kupp said: “At the time, I didn’t know that. Peyton Manning wanting to throw to me? Wow. An honor, of course. It was great to work with him. So detailed and precise.”

Snead, at the time, didn’t know who Kupp was. “I type ‘Cooper Kupp’ into my notes,” Snead said. “Who the heck is Cooper Kupp? Is this guy some high school kid that’s really good? Long story short, Peyton throws to Cooper that night. He was really good. Good route-runner. I find out he’s from Eastern Washington. Just finished his sophomore year.

“So we monitored him. He played against some NFL corners in college and produced. [Kupp did play against Marcus Peters at Washington in 2014, catching eight balls for 145 yards and three touchdowns.] We have a saying around here. If you can get open consistently and catch the ball consistently, don’t over-analyze it. Just respect it and try to add that player to your team.”

When he ran the 4.62 time before the ’17 draft, coach Sean McVay exulted in a call with Snead. “Now we might be able to get him in the third!” McVay told Snead.

Snead: “We strategically were jacked. An FCS kid running in the 4.6s is probably gonna fall in the draft. But he did what a receiver needs to do at this level—accelerate, decelerate, get in and out of breaks in a very efficient and quick manner and separate from a good corner. There was something else. He played receiver with a Peyton Manning-esque, quarterback brain.

“For us, now, I think you got an old-school quarterback brain in Cooper Kupp, and a traditional pocket passer in Matthew Stafford with a lot of experience. And Peyton Manning picking him to run routes for him on that field down in Louisiana is where it all began for us.”

I asked Kupp last week if there was one catch, of the 132 in his first 15 games, that best illustrated him as a receiver—a player who uses leverage against DBs and his quickness in short-areas. “I don’t want to give away too many secrets,” he said. “But there were a couple of routes in our game against the Giants I liked. In fact, the same route basically that I ran twice.”

A check of the film shows Kupp’s 38th and 40th receptions of the year were mirror images of each other: Kupp lined up in the right slot, opposite Giants DB Jabrill Peppers, leveraged him to the inside both times, then veered to an out-route toward the right sideline at about 18 yards. On the first one, Kupp was alone with Peppers, beat him on the out-cut, and caught a perfect throw from Stafford and turned upfield; gain of 30. On the second one, using the same body-lean on Peppers, the Giants gave some help, with two other DBs bracketing the play above and below Kupp’s catch-point near the sideline. But Stafford’s throw landed perfectly in the middle of the three Giants, and Kupp corralled it around his shins; gain of 28.

Peppers is a good player. Kupp’s strengths, though, won these routes—leverage, quickness, finding the hole in coverage, good hands, and basically a sense of exactly when to deke, leaving the defender unsure whether he’s cutting in or out or curling or running to the post. That’s the advantage a smart receiver has, and that’s why Kupp is able, week in and week out, to overcome the focus of almost every defense. After 16 games, he’s had 15 with at least 90 receiving yards. The next-highest in the NFL: seven games.

“It’s more challenging as the season goes on,” Kupp said. “Defenses go to school on us. Every week, I self-scout myself to be sure I’m not giving anything away.”

In a sluggish day for the offense Sunday, Kupp’s 18-yard TD catch on an incut, freezing linebacker Patrick Queen, gave the Rams life and cut into a 10-0 Ravens lead just before halftime. But it was his advice to coach Sean McVay, bringing out his Peyton Manning side, that made McVay so happy after the game. “He recognized that they were playing a certain coverage, and he put that thought in my head,” McVay said. “So, in essence it was his play call. He saw some of the voids and the vacancies in the coverage.”

A minute into the second half, McVay showed how much he trusts Kupp. He called the play, and Stafford hit Jefferson deep down the middle for a 35-yard gain. Four plays later Stafford ruined the drive by losing a fumble, but his point was made: Kupp is the NFL’s best receiver in 2021, and he’s also just what they thought they drafted in 2017—a receiver with a quarterback’s ability to see the field in an egalitarian way.

The 5 game winning streak

some notable stats during the 5 games:

Matthew Stafford - 127 of 169 (.75) for 1332, 11 TD, 6 ints, QBR 101
Sony Michel - 100 for 497, 3 TDs
Cooper Kupp - 46 for 592, 6 TDs
TDS in RZ: 11-18 (61%)
TOs - 6 int, 1 FL = 7 total

Aaron Donald - 3.5 sacks, 5 QBH, TFL 8
Von Miller - 3 sacks, 5 QBH, TFL 7
Def vs run - 120 for 475, avg 3.9, 95 avg per game
TDs allowed in RZ: 5-12 (41%), 2 INT
TOs - 5 int, 3 FR = 8 total

TO diff +1

It's Your Turn, Los Angeles...

This is the first 17th game in the NFL regular season, and it's for the NFC West division crown. If you own tix at SoFi, show up loud and proud for your team! IF you have to sell your tix, it CAN'T be to nasty Niner fans. There better not be a sea of red and gold this Sunday...WE ARE NOT THE RENTERS! LA is our town. Winning a Super Bowl at home will solidify the Rams fanbase for a generation and will create new fans among the children of Raiders fans!

Beyond all that, it's Punch a Niner Week! Do your part!


IC2dHSK.jpg

BAL tosses back to WR w/AD bearing down!!

On the last play of the game, the Ravens pulled a stunt w/their version of a hook & ladder...

Around their own 30 yd line a WR catches a short pass and then tosses it back a few yards to another WR.
Marquis Brown is the lucky recipient of the ball, as DONALD is bearing down and it is no wonder that Brown fumbled it away...
Is there anything more terrifying than that BAD MAN bringing the lumber, totally blind-sided to you, a second after you get the ball???!!!

Any of us mere mortals, would be in the ER 30 minutes later with 8 cracked ribs...... :laugh4:

Rams vs Ravens SNAP COUNT


Rams Week 17 snap counts: Van Jefferson, Ben Skowronek split time as WR3​

78f5df5afa274f54bb47f708b6c89967.jpg

Cameron DaSilva

January 3, 2022 7:24 am PT

The Rams were forced to deploy several backups and role players in the last month or so due to injuries and a massive number of COVID-19 cases. But on Sunday against the Ravens, they were almost at full strength and their starters did most of the heavy lifting as far as playing time goes.

Sean McVay didn’t use a very deep rotation on offense only deploying three players besides the 11 starters. On defense, there was a bigger mix of players used, but for the most part, nine guys played the majority of the snaps.

The snap counts from Week 17 give us an idea of the plan used by McVay against the Ravens, which barely got the job done in a 20-19 victory.

Offense​

Screen-Shot-2022-01-03-at-10.09.37-AM.png


Odell Beckham Jr. has clearly ascended to the WR2 role within the Rams’ offense, playing 98% of the snaps Sunday, tied for his highest snap share since Week 12 against the Packers. Cooper Kupp unsurprisingly played every snap, catching six passes for 95 yards and a touchdown.

The biggest surprise is that Van Jefferson only played four more snaps than Ben Skowronek. Jefferson wasn’t on the field at all during the Rams’ game-winning drive and it appears his last play came on Sony Michel’s touchdown run with 12:09 left in the game. Skowronek replaced him during that last drive, catching one pass for 15 yards with under three minutes to play. McVay didn’t say anything about Jefferson getting hurt, so it’s unclear why he wasn’t playing down the stretch.

Sony Michel played all but one snap on offense, being replaced by Jake Funk for only one play in the game. He could get a little bit of a breather in Week 18 if Cam Akers returns.

Tyler Higbee missed only two snaps as the Rams leaned heavily on 11 personnel and rarely used two-tight end sets. Kendall Blanton played just three snaps on offense.

Defense​

Screen-Shot-2022-01-03-at-10.09.55-AM.png


The Rams used more players on defense than they did on offense, which is the case every week. But it still wasn’t a very deep rotation on that side of the ball. Jalen Ramsey and Darious Williams played every snap, while Dont’e Deayon and David Long Jr. split time as the nickel corner. Deayon did play 12 more snaps than Long, however.

Jordan Fuller and Taylor Rapp never came off the field, and Nick Scott rotated in as the third safety for 21 plays, or 30% of the snaps. That’s about his usual snap share at this point in the season.

Greg Gaines was a warrior in this one, playing through a broken bone in his hand and only coming off the field for two snaps. He was in visible pain on the field and sideline but he battled through.

A’Shawn Robinson played 59% of the snaps as the third defensive lineman, his highest snap share since Week 10 against the 49ers.

Leonard Floyd and Von Miller played most of the game, staying on the field for 62 and 59 snaps, respectively. Justin Hollins and Ogbonnia Okoronkwo were the only other edge rushers, playing a combined 21 snaps.

Troy Reeder was the primary replacement for Ernest Jones, playing 96% of the snaps compared to just 28% for Travin Howard, who’s been elevated to the No. 2 linebacker spot with Jones out.

New Year's Resolution - GDT

I admit, I don't frequent the GDT too often, as my schedule dictates I watch the game delayed and don't want spoilers. So yesterday I looked forward to following along in the GDT as the action happened live.

WOW.

Stafford throws a pick-6, I comment that the D made a great play to jump that route (and later McVay confirmed it was a mistake route by OBJ), and we get 4 full pages of how Stafford sucks.

Stafford throws another pick that was just as good as a punt (and later McVay confirmed that the hurry up he called was a big reason Stafford didn't go to VJ on the short crosser), and we get 4 more pages of how Stafford sucks.

Stafford throws an amazing 20+ yard pass while being hit from the front, not one post. I didn't say not one PAGE. NOT. ONE. POST.

Stafford throws TD to Kupp, and we get some great (and deserved) kudos for our hero Kupp. Not one post on a great throw by Stafford.

I have news for you. Any team not named Green Bay has a QB that will make big mistakes.

The GDT should be an online version of 50 Rams fans in the corner of a Sports Bar screaming at the big screen TV. Yeah, we'll cheer and high-five when we score, and we'll moan when bad things happen. But we won't spend precious beer drinking time complaining about how lousy our players are. We're not 4-12, we're freaking 12-4.

So my New Year's Resolution is to stay away from the GDT. Which is sad for me. Maybe yours should be to lighten up and enjoy interacting with folks who love your team as much as you do.

Go Rams!

  • Poll Poll
Which Records Will Cooper Kupp Break?

Which Single Season Records will Cooper Kupp Break?

  • Receptions (needs 12)

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Yards (Needs 136)

    Votes: 9 20.9%
  • Both ….he’s Cooper Freakin Kupp

    Votes: 24 55.8%
  • Neither…I’m a negative Nancy

    Votes: 10 23.3%

We all know Cooper Kupp is having all all-time great season and he is on the verge of eclipsing some single season records.

Coop currently sits 3rd all time in receptions with 138 and 5th all time with 1,829 yards.

If my math is correct he needs 12 catches for 136 yards to be number one in single season yards and receptions. Personally I think he goes out and has himself a day and gets both done.

What say you?

Bravo Coach

I have been one of the posters critical of our coach for not establishing our run game, and getting pass happy. I was fully prepared for Sean to go pass happy after getting down early against the Ravens, but, to his credit, he stuck with Sony making critical run after critical run. I believe the Ravens are ranked #1 against the run as well. I’m still not a fan of the empty sets deep on our end of the field, but I like what coach has done with Sony during our winning streak. Bravo

Cooper Kupp deserves more talk as MVP

Everyone knows Kupp is a stud and having a historic season.
But in a weird way... he's being overshadowed by Donald's greatness, BadMatt Staffords pick 6s, GoodMatt Staffords 4thQ heroics, OBJ's comeback tour, Von Miller's acclimation, Covid protocols etc etc etc.

Yo, Los Angeles Rams. You are hollywood now. You have mainstream media connections. PUT THE WORD OUT. Kupp for MVP

FORGET the triple crown aspect. That speaks for itself. It's his impact in the running game that is on a level of its own. Look at Sony Michels TD run. Kupp was the key block, blowing his assignment back.
Nobody is better with the ball in his hands this year and nobody is better without the ball. That's an MVP season. It doesn't matter if he doesn't win it - the QB love affair will never go away - what matters is that he should... and it's possible he could.

The permutations are doing my head in

Is there anybody who could make the playoffs that we absolutely cannot meet with games going certain ways other than Green Bay?

I really do not want the 9ers back-to-back.

Having said that, if Stafford can get his shit together and we start to click on all cylinders I think we're the best team in the NFL and capable of beating anybody.

That's a big if though.

MNF - Browns at Steelers

Monday Night Football: Cleveland Browns vs. Pittsburgh Steelers​

Entering 2022, the Cleveland Browns and Pittsburgh Steelers are dealing with two very different three-ring circuses surrounding their quarterback. For the Steelers, a Week 17 Monday night game with playoff implications will likely be the final time their 18-year starter, Ben Roethlisberger, leads them into battle at Heinz Field.

"Looking at the bigger picture," Roethlisberger told reporters Thursday, "I would say that all signs are pointing to this could be it."

That reality also applies to the Steelers' (7-7-1) playoff chances. A loss officially eliminates them from the crowded postseason picture that gained some clarity on Sunday. The AFC North has already been claimed by Cincinnati but Pittsburgh still has a shot, albeit a slim one, of getting a wild-card berth at 9-7-1 if it beats Cleveland on Monday and then a banged-up Baltimore Ravens bunch in the finale.

The Browns were officially eliminated from playoff contention on Sunday. Their three-ring quarterback circus revolves around an ailing Baker Mayfield receiving death threats. His wife initially publicized them in an Instagram story, written warnings Mayfield claimed were "not anything new for us" when addressing them in front of reporters this week.

"We are just in a world today and society that there are a lot of keyboard warriors who make empty threats and things like that," Mayfield said. "Which it is quite honestly ignorant when they go after people who are not directly involved in football."

So with Cleveland's season basically over will the Browns even put up much of a fight on Monday night in the Steel City?

Monday Night Football: Cleveland (7-8) at Pittsburgh (7-7-1)

Kickoff: Monday, Jan. 3 at 8:15 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN
Spread: Browns -3.5

Three Things to Watch

1. Can the Steelers jump-start their offense?

There's a reason the 39-year-old Roethlisberger is on the verge of calling it quits, battling through shoulder and pectoral injuries for much of the season. The Steelers have scored 20 points or fewer in four of their last five games, producing an average of 212 net passing yards during that stretch. Big Ben bottomed out last week against the Chiefs, averaging just 4.54 yards per attempt and finishing with 159 passing yards overall. That’s the second-worst average for him in any game over the past 10 years.

The lack of offensive production has caused the Steelers to fall behind early, limiting the effectiveness of first-round pick Najee Harris. The rookie is on the verge of 1,000 yards but is only averaging 3.7 yards per carry. No one else on the team has rushed for more than 75 yards, a weakened offensive line offering Harris limited support. (They’re ranked just 27th in the NFL in time of possession).

Another rookie, tight end Pat Freiermuth, has been an offensive bright spot but missed the Chiefs game due to a concussion. He should be set to return Monday night and could provide another option beyond wide receivers Diontae Johnson and Chase Claypool.

2. Who's healthy and who's not?

Once again, the specter of COVID-19 hangs over this game as both teams are dealing with players sidelined due to positive tests. The Steelers' defense has been hard hit, with three starters currently on the Reserve/COVID-19 list: DL Chris Wormley, ILB Joe Schobert, and ILB Devin Bush. Nose tackle Isaiah Buggs and defensive back Arthur Maulet have both rejoined the team.

Schobert and Wormley are arguably the biggest losses. Schobert's 108 tackles rank second on the team while Wormley has six sacks, including one against the Browns in their 15-10 victory back in Week 8.

The Browns, meanwhile, are slowly recovering from a COVID-19 wave that took down their top two quarterbacks, leaving them inactive in a Week 15 loss against the Raiders. Since then, they've slowly been adding back starters, activating kicker Chase McLaughlin and center JC Tretter earlier this week. That leaves just three players from the active roster (also two from the practice squad), left on the Reserve/COVID-19 list prior to Monday's contest.

But the Browns are dealing with some key injuries as both starting safeties — John Johnson III (hamstring) and Ronnie Harrison Jr. (ankle) — will be out, as will cornerback Troy Hill (knee). Running back Kareem Hunt (ankle) and defensive tackle Malik Jackson (knee) are listed as questionable. Cleveland's roster is in much better shape than it was last week but it's not at full strength. The Browns will need contributions from everyone, especially on defense, if they want to pull off a road win in the midst of an emotional moment for the Steelers.

3. Which Baker Mayfield will show up?

In the past two weeks, all the focus and pressure has zeroed in on Mayfield. Suffering through a year of injuries and struggling to perform up to expectations, his four interceptions made the difference in a razor-thin 24-22 road loss to Green Bay on Christmas day. Six of the Browns' eight losses have been by less than seven points; Mayfield had the ball on the final drive in two of them only to throw a game-ending interception.

The last time the Browns QB passed for more than 300 yards? Oct. 10. Mayfield hasn't thrown for more than two touchdowns in any game this season and he's played most of the year with a torn labrum, fractured humerus bone, and right knee injuries that limit his mobility.

How does Mayfield plan to turn it around?

"This [season] has had a little more drama, should you say," he said to reporters this week. "It comes down to handling your business, trying to find ways to win any possible way, and doing that week in and week out. Right now, we are in a situation where it is very apparent that we have to win this game. That is our job right now, and we are focused on that."

Final Analysis

On paper, the Browns are better. But hasn't that been the case all season long, in too many games for one of the NFL's big disappointments? Roethlisberger's final home game feels like the type of emotional wave that's enough to tilt this one in the Steelers' favor.

What that means for Mayfield, head coach Kevin Stefanski and the rest of the Browns is anyone's guess. But with the playoffs no longer a possibility, it's a fair assumption to question how much energy and emotion they'll play with on Monday night.

Prediction: Steelers 24, Browns 13

20 Random Nevermore Proud, Despite the Mistakes, Thoughts

1. Its easy to grin, when your ship has come in, and you've got the stock market beat. But the man who's worthwhile, is the man who can smile, when his shorts are too tight in the seat." - Judge Elihu Smails

2. The way you view today's game will depend on how you choose to perceive the world in general.

3. In the half-empty column, you have a game in which the Rams played an inferior opponent (missing its best player) and had to go to the wire, primarily due to turnovers (and a rare missed FG).

4. In the half-full column, you have a win that could result in the clinching of a division title (Go Cowb--- Go Cowbo---- nope, just can't seem to type those words) as a result of a clutch, come from behind, fourth quarter.

5. So who had Matthew Stafford turning the ball over 6 times in 2 games... and the Rams WINNING BOTH?

6. Stafford needs to avoid those turnovers. Its as simple as that. Really nothing else to say about it.

7. Still... 14/14 for 162 yards in the second half is impressive. Really impressive.

8. I see some real value in today's game going into the playoffs.

9. Playing through adversity and scoring a go-ahead TD in the final minute on the road has value.

10. Vonn Miller and Odell Beckham make key plays to produce this win has value.

11. Getting contributions from guys like Tyler Higbee, Ben Skowronek and Jordan Fuller matters.

12. Not much being revealed about the Jalen Ramsey/Taylor Rapp dust-up. In a way, I don't mind what I saw... Ramsey is a passionate leader, and Rapp probably earned some respect by coming right back at him.

13. The defense continues to play well. In particular, the pass rush, lead by Miller, Aaron Donald (watch how his push allowed A'Shawn Robinson to register his first sack of the year) and Leonard Floyd, was key. Let's see more of that.

14. Cooper Kupp is amazing. On some plays, he seems to hypnotize defenders with a well-timed pause, only to juke, spin and gain more yards. His season is one for the history books.

15. He also apparently made an impromptu play call, resulting in a 35 yard completion to Van Jefferson. Future OC... HC... I can definitely see a "Coach Kupp" future in the NFL.

16. Well, Antonio Brown... that's ONE way to end a career.

17. The Seahawks are beating up on a short-handed Lions team and celebrating like it's a playoff game. I just don't like that team.

18. Joe Burrow is becoming a superstar.

19. Still a lot to be worked out in the next two weeks. We don't know where the Rams will wind up in the playoff seedings. But, right now, with a 5 week win streak, I'm feeling pretty good.

20. 12 wins. Let that sink in.... then start thinking about the hated 49ers.

My son is a Ram's Fan....

He hasn't cared until now. He was born in 2008.

They had losing seasons the beginning of his whole life.
He never understood or cared for his dad's masochistic fanaticism toward the Horns.

Then came McVay.

Yesterday...He watched underdog story with me at the theatre. He looked at me after the part where he got called up by the Rams after the Arena Bowl Loss , and saw me misty eyed. In an instant-- he understood more of me -- betty white, 42, john madden (all of it) -- at 13 years old, he was aligned with me-- he appreciated the complex nature of the history of his dad.

Today--he rooted with me. Not like a young man who grew up with Pat Summerall and John Madden-- But like a young man who grew up with an appreciation of his fathers past and present--and simply loved the horns. He loved them for his own reasons. He was invested.

When we sacked them at mid field and ended the game he genuinely freaked out with me. We rocked the house. We gave neighbors cause for concern.
When O'Dell got us the go ahead score -- he stomped on the floor and freaked out with me-- just like I did.

I'm a proud father and a proud Ram's fan.

I'm certain I've passed the torch....and it's about fuckin' time.
ROD Buddhas (@Selassie I and others--I just got to say-- I love all you guys ---Thanks for inviting me to me Rod from the dispatch all those years ago.
And I got a good feelin' about our last 4 games.

Go Rams!
Go Rams' Nation.

  • Locked
Tampa Bay Buccaneers WR Antonio Brown rips off equipment, runs off field during third quarter

Tampa Bay Buccaneers WR Antonio Brown rips off equipment, runs off field during third quarter​

3:35 PM ET
  • i

    Jenna LaineESPN Staff Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- Showing visible frustration, Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Antonio Brown left the field in the third quarter against the New York Jets on Sunday and has not returned.
Teammates Mike Evans and O.J. Howard attempted to calm Brown, who took off his jersey, pads and undershirt, throwing his shirt and gloves into the stands. He then dashed across the end zone while both teams were on the field and waved to fans as he went to the locker room.
A spokesperson for the team said the Bucs would not be addressing the issue during the game, but according to the Buccaneers Radio Network, Brown was benched before leaving the field.
*****************************************************************************************************************
The real AB is back. meaning he is a complete idiot.
If they don't release him after this charade, then the Bucs are idiots as well.
Someone get that man some therapy and medication.

Filter