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Peter King: 10/29/18

These are excerpts. Only Rams/Packers mentions are included here. To read the whole article click the link below.
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https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...ckers-todd-gurley-fmia-nfl-week-8-peter-king/

FMIA Week 8: On the Role a Rolex Played In Keeping the Rams Perfect
By Peter King

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LOS ANGELES — When you’re undefeated, you need some luck along the way. The Rams’ luck Sunday was Ty Montgomery, two yards deep in the end zone, choosing to run the ball out—instead of giving the ball to one of the best quarterbacks ever at his 25 with two minutes left, needing just a field goal to win. Montgomery fumbled. Rams recovered. Wisconsin threw a brick through its collective TV set. Game over.

But that’s too simple. This game was actually a vivid illustration why the Rams, at 8-0, sit atop the NFL mountain approaching the midpoint of the NFL’s 99th season. They will have contenders to the throne, contenders from New England and Kansas City and rising New Orleans (8-0 Rams at 6-1 Saints, next Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET), and maybe even from Minnesota, Carolina, Washington or down the street; the Chargers seem pesky.

It’s a good illustration because of Todd Gurley, the friendly guy with the long dreads and skinny wire-framed glasses, who does everything right and fits in on a team with a smart young coach and unassuming young quarterback and a team that plays complementary football.

One tight game, two exemplary plays.

I always look for the plays that explain precisely why teams are what they are, and I found two in the Rams’ locker room after the 29-27 victory.

One: Todd Gurley’s 30-yard touchdown reception in the middle of the third quarter, which looked so ridiculously easy. How does the best back in football, the legit MVP candidate, go untouched out of the backfield, go untouched on a crossing route, and go untouched running all the way for a touchdown?

Two: The “Rolex Play,” Gurley’s 17-yard run with 65 seconds left, the one when he just stopped running and went down at the 4-yard line, much to the chagrin of Vegas and fantasy fiends alike. You’ve got to hear the Rolex story.

So … were you watching Sunday? What a tremendous game in a tremendous setting, the 95-year-old Coliseum with the classic peristyles, with a quarterback certain to go down in history waiting for one more shot to win that never came. And the atmosphere. When the Packers came out of the ancient tunnel where so many of the greats in football history have entered, it sounded like Lambeau West—truly, maybe louder than if this game had been at Lambeau Field.

“I didn’t really expect that in L.A., but that crowd was fantastic,” Aaron Rodgers said. Sometimes, you’re witnessing an event that’s just different—and this was just different, and great. I’m sorry we didn’t get to see another classic Rodgers late drive, but that’s football. The dumb Montgomery play—it happens.

But that should not obscure what else we saw in the 29-27 L.A. victory. Namely this: The Rams are not going anywhere. They survived Sunday, but every great team has to survive on days when it’s not at its best, or when the foe is really good. Look back at every champion, and you’ll see a shaky win or two. There is no shame in edging Aaron Rodgers instead of dominating him.

On Sunday, two plays taught us so much about this team. A touchdown and an oddity. Understand those, and you go a long way toward understanding this team.
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The Lead: Gurley

As the NFL reaches its midpoint, the 8-0 Rams and 7-1 Chiefs are the headliners. They meet three weeks from tonight, in Mexico City. We’ll have time to blow out that story.

First, two plays. I want you to understand the Los Angeles Rams.

The Gurley Touchdown
The Rams have a jillion weapons in the passing game. Gurley is third in targets. Often, he feels first. He’s so good out of the backfield that coach Sean McVay tries to get him the ball in space three or four times a game, and he uses the legal picks that so many teams use. When they work, they’re things of beauty. When they don’t, the ball might be incomplete, or the back might get waylaid coming out of the backfield.

“The key is Higbee,” Gurley told me at his locker after the game. That’s Tyler Higbee, the Rams’ Bavaro-like 255-pound tight end. “Higbee’s a beast.”

On this play, Gurley is split left in the slot, and he runs out just past the line, then does a crosser to the right. The Packers’ precocious inside linebacker, Blake Martinez, spies Gurley and makes a beeline for him. But here comes Higbee. All he wants to do is “accidentally” knock the Gurley cover guy off his course. Higbee puts an “accidental” shoulder into Martinez, and suddenly, Gurley is wide open. Martinez, who would have been hopelessly behind Gurley, now covers Higbee, hoping one of his mates sees the legal pick play.

Somebody get Gurley!

Nobody got Gurley.

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McVay, afterward, didn’t want to give away the store, but he did tell me, “That was by design.” Of course it was. So many things the Rams do are by design, ghost-like maneuvers you don’t see clearly but when they’re over, you wonder, “How’d that happen?”

At his locker, Gurley was almost sheepish about it, like his coach. “Their guy [Martinez] was off me a little bit,” Gurley said. “My job is just be patient and then go across, come underneath him. It was wide open. We were practicing this play for probably a month.”

“A month?” I said.

“Yeah,” he said. “Never called it once. Not in a game. Just in practice. In practice, our guys haven’t been able to pick it up, not one time in practice. We’re like, ‘Yeah, this is gonna work.’ “

“You mean the pick part of it?” I said.

“Yup,” he said. “It’s a natural pick. Higbee’s the best. He’s one of the best shift blockers in the league. He does a lot of great stuff that gets unnoticed on this team. He’s our sixth offensive lineman and he’s always doing great job in play action passes, everything. His work does not go unnoticed by his teammates—tell you that.”

The team, the team, the team.

The Rolex Play
So we shouldn’t go crazy in praising a player for getting down in-bounds and giving up a touchdown for the good of the team, when the clock can be run out. We won’t. But it’s worth pointing out because it illustrates a lot about how symphonic this team is, and how the players and coaches listen and learn.

In training camp, McVay works on special plays. Odd plays, plays that might come up once a year or maybe once in 10 years. Or never. In camp, McVay and the staff worked on the play they christened the “Rolex Play.” Meaning this, as McVay told me: “Time is more important than the points. Time means everything there.”

It’s part of the McVay program. Each week, the special teams coach, John Fassel (the ultra-slim man’s nickname is “Bones”), gathers plays from around the league—either good ideas on weird plays, or plays teams messed up by simply not using common sense.

“Bones has a meeting every week where we compile situations, try to educate ourselves as coaches and our players on, If this happens, how do we handle it? Rolex was one of those. In Rolex, if we got a first down there, that was one of those get-down-in-bounds situations. As long as we hang onto the ball, they can’t score. But we score, then they get the ball back.”

In the huddle, on third-and-10 with 65 seconds to play, multiple guys said one of three things: “Rolex,” “Get down,” and “Don’t score.” That, as guard Rodger Saffold told me, is a group of players who understand what’s required there, all thinking in unison. Again: It’s not stunningly smart. It’s just sensible, and shows how unified and well-drilled the team is.

So McVay called the power sweep, pitched to Gurley. Classic power football. And it worked. From the 21, Gurley broke through the line and sprinted toward the goal line. “I could have walked into the end zone,” Gurley said. “But we talked in the huddle about being situationally aware and just getting down and winning the game.”

It almost looked like the Green Bay defensive back, vet Tramon Williams, tried to lift up Gurley and keep him going. Strange, unless you understand the story.

“They want the ball in 12’s hands, of course,” Gurley said. Aaron Rodgers, he means.

A Jared Goff kneeldown, and game over.

I said to Gurley: “You realize every fantasy player who has you on their team is screaming, “Score! Score!”

Players, many of them, hate the fantasy football pollution on the game. Gurley gave me a little bit of a snide look. He said: “They should be happy about all the performances I gave them in the weeks before. They need to be humbled as well.”

So there.

“Lots to like about today,” left tackle Andrew Whitworth said. “Honestly, this game showed a lot about how we’re about team and family before it’s about anything. The most special things the Rams have going on offensively is that some of their best players are really some of the most special people. Jared and Todd. Really, two special human beings as far as their humbleness, their attitudes, really just the way they come in every single day to work as hard as anybody else if not harder. We’re in good hands with those guys.”

They’re in good hands, period. “Teams are testing us now, trying to figure out what to do to beat us, and they’ve got a lot of film to do that,” Whitworth said. “It’s a test for us, but …”

He trailed off. I can complete the sentence.

But they’re passing the test.
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The Rams, want a pass-rusher. I hear defensive coordinator Wade Phillips is lukewarm on Denver’s Ray (having coached him two years ago), and if the Jags make disappointing high first-round pick Dante Fowler Jr., available, the Rams would have interest. L.A. is unlikely to deal swing guard Jamon Brown for a late-round pick, though there’s been interest. He’s a low-cost insurance guy for the line.
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Special Teams Players of the Week

Sam Shields, cornerback, and Johnny Hekker, kicker, Los Angeles Rams. Reunion day for Shields, who was such a force for Green Bay from 2010-16. Remember his two picks and a sack in the 2010 NFC title game, the win over Chicago that propelled the Packers to the Super Bowl?

Against his old team Sunday, after hugging Aaron Rodgers pregame, Shields caught a fake-punt pass from Hekker to extend a second-quarter drive, then downed a Hekker punt inside the Packer 1 that led to a safety and the Rams first points of the day. Great day for Shields and, as usual, for Hekker.
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Goats of the Week

Ty Montgomery, kick returner, Green Bay. Does Montgomery know who Green Bay’s quarterback is? With his team trailing by two and under three minutes to play, all Montgomery needed to do was to take a knee after receiving a Ram kickoff in the end zone. Instead, Montgomery inexplicably ran it out—disobeying got hammered and coughed up the football. Rams recovered. And Aaron Rogers and the offense never had the chance to finish off the upset.
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MVP Watch

2. Todd Gurley, RB, L.A. Rams. Last week: 2. Thirty-two touches, 195 yards, and the offense of the 8-0 flows through him. I saw it for myself.

Victory Monday

Point blank, Packers had an extra week to game plan. They had some guys return from injury. They held an early 10 point lead, at times had home field advantage. And despite a horrible first half and lack of holding calls. We are still missing our number 1 corner, our safety value wide receiver in Kupp. Yet we find a way to win. 8-0 Baby!!!!

Rams still score 29 points (possibly 7 more at the end)
Todd Gurley still gets 114 on the ground and almost 90 in the air.
Jared Goff throws for 3 touchdowns and nearly 300 yards (out dueling the HOF Mr. Rodgers)

Lets keep this train moving and enjoy yet another victory Monday


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From a Packers fan!

I just wanted to send a Congratulations out to you guys on your win yesterday. That loss stung bad, feels like a bad breakup hahaha. Anyways hats off to the Rams. God bless and I hope you guys have an awesome wonderful rest of the season and you stay healthy. I still knew we would lose even playing so well early. After that safety I knew it was all downhill for us from there. We played well still taking the lead but you guys are a good football team. Montgomery fumbled away our possible last gasp. Who's to say though we don't get stopped anyway. I always liked the Rams and hope if we don't do anything I'm all for you guys, Washington or the Saints to take the NFC.

The Refs Really Suck?

Normally I don't get all bent because bad officiating usually evens out but let me air out my grievances. My wife is a whiners fan so she's objective when I show her replays (of course I'm biased but try not to be). She said the Rams got freaking jobbed.

On the Packers first big play of the game, I couldn't see the number, but a Rams DL was getting a hands to the face right in front of the ref. A minute later, the Packers scored.

Brandin Cooks needs a new Jersey because his got shredded from all the grabbing he took from the Packers.

On the Rams safety against the Packers, Baron was being tackled by a Packers O lineman.

Two calls got overturned (in the Rams favor) in the last few minutes before halftime (WTH - we playing in LA or Green Bay?). Cooks catch looked like a no brainer to me.

In the second half, Goff gets hit after sliding down and giving himself up. (If it was Brady, the whole field would have been yellow).

Roger Saffold got called for holding in a crucial moment down the stretch. Yes, it was holding but at least F-N call it on the Packers too!

This should be a big growth win for Jared

He got his @$$ kicked early on and overall hung in there to put up a good overall stat line in spite of spending much of the first half out of sync and lookin jittery. I'm proud of him overcoming that start, and I think he's getting closer and closer to being that guy who will be able to take over the game late like we've seen with the greats at the position.

Kid ain't there yet. He could have put it away with that series after the flubbed punt in the fourth in which the first two downs were him taking a handoff action the wrong way (assuming there) and then missing Woods down the sideline. But what matters is he persevered enough for us to claw our way out of that GB home game :p with a win.

New Orleans is going to be another tough one man. I pray we have Kupp back for that one, and presume they were holding him out expressly for that matchup.

  • Locked
McVay said he was suprised by all the cheering when the packers scored.

I'm really not trying to start shit.. because I love Cali... my cousins live out there.

But at some point I'd like to see some Seattle like home chaos.

Didn't like all the loud packers cheering.. and McVay was very subtle about it but you could tell he didn't like it either. He came back and tried to downplay it later because that's his style.

And again don't get me wrong.. being from the midwest I still love them in Cali, but I sure hope the home environment develops....

So, just how much “eliteness” is on this ‘18 Ram team, anyway?

Depends on how one defines “elite”, first of all. Top 10%? Top 5%?

Here’s my take on Ram elite players and/or position groups...

Goff. Not quite there yet but he’s headed in right direction. Top 5 QB, IMO.

Gurley. Duh!

Entire OL. Rated the best by multiple sources.

Big Whit.

Saffold.

Hav. Yeah, Hav, dammit!

Cooks. Top 10%, I think.

Woods. Another top 10%.

Kupp. Best slot WR in the league?

Ram DL as a whole.

AD. Another duh!

When healthy, is there a better CB tandem? Elite unit, definitely.

NRC. Probably the best nickel corner in the league.

JJ. A case for top 10% could easily be made for him.

Hekker. C’mon...

Healthy GZ. Yup.

McQuaide. Sure.

Then there’s the coaching staff. Definitely elite.

McVay
Phillips
Kromer
Fassel
Barry
Pleasant
Yarber

Among others. What a group!

We is blessed with an embarrassment of riches.

Packers at Rams

IT’S GAME DAY!

The GDT is a live thread tradition here at ROD.

While we all get fired up watching the game, please remember our core principles; we always show respect for our team and each other.

Despite the emotional highs and lows watching a game, we will moderate this thread with that in mind, however please refrain from name calling. This applies to players, the Rams organization, and others.

This is the core rule of the GDT. Moderators are tasked to issue thread bans, at a minimum, to maintain this standard.

This is our team. Win or lose. Good days and bad.

Go Rams!

SNF: Saints at Vikings

https://athlonsports.com/nfl/sunday...ts-vs-minnesota-vikings-prediction-picks-2018

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Sunday Night Football: New Orleans Saints vs. Minnesota Vikings

Week 8 of the NFL season offers New Orleans the chance to exact some revenge on Minnesota. The Vikings beat the Saints twice last season, but the one everyone remembers is the NFC Divisional Round playoff game that saw the home team escape thanks to the "Minneapolis Miracle."

Last week, it was the Saints (5-1) who escaped from the Ravens on the road, as Drew Brees and Asshole Face picked up their first career wins over Baltimore thanks to a 17-point fourth quarter and a history-making miss on an extra point attempt by Justin Tucker. With everyone thinking the game was headed into overtime following Joe Flacco's 14-yard touchdown pass to John Brown with just 24 seconds remaining, Tucker's miss (his first after making the first 222 PATs of his career) secured New Orleans' impressive 24-23 road victory and kept the team in first place in the NFC South.

The Vikings (4-2-1) also come into this game with momentum, having won three in a row to put them atop the NFC North. Two of those (Philadelphia, New York Jets) came on the road. Minnesota is getting quality quarterback play from Kirk Cousins while the defense is starting to round into from after some tough outings earlier in the season.

New Orleans at Minnesota

Kickoff: Sunday, Oct. 28, 8:20 PM ET
TV Channel: NBC
Spread: Vikings -1

Three Things to Watch

1. Will Kirk Cousins and Adam Thielen shred the Saints’ pass defense?


Adam Thielen has dominated opposing defensive backs. In three key categories (total receptions, receiving yards per game and receptions for first downs), he leads the NFL. He has averaged 117.4 receiving yards per game. He has caught at least 100 yards worth of passes in every game this season. His five receiving touchdowns have him tied for seventh in the league.

Kirk Cousins has contributed his fair share toward the offensive success of Minnesota. He has completed 70 percent of his passes, good for the fourth-highest completion rate in the NFL. He has averaged 308.9 yards through the air. His 14 touchdown passes are tied for ninth most in the NFL. He also has thrown just three interceptions.

The Saints' defensive backs have been the weakest component of their team. They have allowed opposing quarterbacks back to complete 69 percent of their passes for an average of 293.7 yards per game, both fifth highest in the NFL. They have permitted nine touchdown passes, ninth most. They have intercepted only two passes, which is the second lowest total.

Questions are also swirling around the availability of some of the Saints’ defensive backs. Is Marcus Williams’ groin injury serious enough to make him miss any snaps? He did sit out the final Ravens’ possession last week because of this issue. Will Eli Apple be able to contribute any playing time? The Saints just acquired him in a trade with the Giants on Tuesday.

If the Saints have hope of keeping Cousins, Thielen and the rest of the Vikings’ offense in check, it lies in pressuring the quarterback. He has been sacked 19 times, the 11th-highest total in the NFL. His passing yards per game, adjusted after subtracting sack yardage, drops to 293 per game. However, the Saints have sacked opposing quarterbacks only 13 times, fifth fewest in the NFL.

2. Will the Saints smother yet another opponent’s rushing attack?

The Vikings have relied noticeably more on passing to advance the ball. Latavius Murry has been pressed into lead running back duties because of a lingering hamstring injury to Dalvin Cook. He's averaging just 47.1 rushing yards per game, but some of that is due to Cook's presence earlier in the season, as Murray has gotten a total of 69 carries in the first seven games. He has run for 224 yards and three touchdowns in the last two games, wins over the Cardinals and Jets.

As well as Cousins has played, Minnesota needs a semblance of a running game. In the four games when the Vikings have gained at least 70 yards on the ground they are 4-0. When they fall short of that mark they are just 0-2-1.

New Orleans is allowing just 72.3 rushing yards per game so right around Minnesota's magic number. When the Saints have held opponents to less than 70 yards on the ground they are 3-0. They have only given up more than 93 rushing yards once. Tampa Bay ran for 112 in the season opener, which also is the only game New Orleans has lost thus far.

3. Can Vikings put pressure on Drew Brees and force turnovers?

The Vikings need to harass Brees for Minnesota to win. They are tied for sixth place with sacks per game with three per game. In one of their two losses, they sacked the opposing quarterback just once.

The Saints have improved their protection of the NFL's all-time leading passer. His offensive line has given up only nine sacks in six games. That is tied for second lowest in the league. Last week, the fearsome Ravens’ defense only dropped Brees once for a loss of seven yards.

Minnesota’s defense needs to pick off some passes or recover some fumbles in addition. The Vikings have had at least two takeaways in all four victories. When they have not any contributed turnovers, they are 0-2-1.

New Orleans’ offense has protected the ball for the most part. The Saints are the only team who has not yet thrown an interception this season. They have fumbled the ball away six times. Their number of turnovers is tied for third lowest in the NFL.

Final Analysis

The Saints return to the site where last season began and ended for them. Asshole Face and his players have downplayed any notion of revenge against the Vikings. Has his team completely moved past being one miraculous play away from the NFC Championship Game?

The Vikings have righted their ship after a 1-2-1 start. They have reverted to their mode of operation from the mid-80s through the early '90s: a quarterback firing the ball to speedy receivers to offset a mediocre running game complemented with a fierce pass rush on defense. Those teams bedeviled the Saints too.

Prediction: Vikings 31, Saints 30

McVay updates on Talib, Cooper Thomas and Obo

https://www.therams.com/news/mcvay-provides-updates-on-talib-cooper-thomas-and-okoronkwo

Overall the Rams have remained pretty healthy throughout the course of the 2018 season. But there are a few key players who have not been able to play for some time.

Three of them are on injured reserve: cornerback Aqib Talib, wide receiver/returner Pharoh Cooper, and wide receiver Mike Thomas. All three of them were placed on injured reserve with an ankle injury.

Los Angeles, however, will have the option to bring back only two off of injured reserve. Head coach Sean McVay said on Thursday that the idea has always been to bring Talib back. But because there’s still some time before any of the players are eligible to return — Cooper would be first following Week 9 — a lot is still up in the air.

“Right now, because that still is a little bit a ways away, and there's just so many things that can take place in the meantime, unfortunately, with the way injuries play out and the way that we're kind of figuring out what's the best way to get our ’46’ up on game day and how that adjusts and alters on a week-to-week basis,” McVay said. “Those guys are doing a great job with their rehab. They're making great progress. Once those timetables do come up that we could potentially utilize that ‘designated to return’ on those guys, it would definitely be predicated on the situation.

“I think just looking at it, unless something changes, Aqib has always been a guy that we've anticipated using that on,” McVay continued. “How that affects the other guys it's hard to say, but nothing is set in stone. Just with the way that we approached it, putting them on IR, kind of the intent and what we've always kind of anticipated — unless something changes — was that Aqib would be one of those players that would be used as far as designating that to return on.”

Outside linebacker Ogbonnia Okoronkwo started the regular season on the physically unable to perform list. He’s been back at practice for over a week now, but given the way Los Angeles has been holding its practices — with a walk-thru instead of a full session on Wednesdays — there just haven’t been many reps to evaluate. Because of that, McVay said the team will likely use the full 21-day window to make a decision on activating Okoronkwo to the 53-man roster.

“[T]hat’s kind of the trajectory that we're on right now,” McVay said. “Really, he's done a nice job with the things that he can control. The thing that's interesting about it is being able to do some individual things, but because of the way that we're practicing at this point in the season, being mindful of especially some of the guys that are naturally just banged up through seven weeks, he's had limited opportunities to really show how he's doing. But he is making progress. It's been good to have him out there. He's got a great demeanor and we're seeing good things. But as far as any sort of updates or changes, there's nothing on that front right now.”

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