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Rams vs Broncos

Super pumped for this game. My buddy and I will be in Denver for it. Anyone else attending?

I just saw it might snow. Anything goes for that type of game. It should be interesting but they look very suspect on defense right now. Todd Gurley could go for 200 yards.

I want revenge on Case Keenum. I need to see our defense make him look like the sub par QB he is. I’m gunna say the Rams win this 31-17. If it snows hard enough, 20-9. Thoughts?

Chiefs @ Patriots

Since those assholes booted through the winning field goal in Super Bowl XXXVI, the Patriots are the only team I "Hate"! Since then, I've rooted for "any" team playing the Pats. That's going on 17 years now. That's somewhere around 285 football games where I'd pray these shit faces would lose.

But, this week. This week they host the Chiefs. Any Chief's loss right now would be sweet, of course, leaving Rams as only undefeated (assuming they knock off the Broncos).

Should we suck it up and, dare I say it in this forum, root for the Pats? Root for Belichick? Root for the Ugg wearing Brady?

Help...I don't know what to do!!!

The Stars Are Lining Up For The Rams

I know there's been a lot of talk about our defense but I think that will get worked out. But aside from that, the stars seem to be lining up for the Rams.

The NFC contenders have had slow starts.

Vikings 2-2-1
Packers 2-2-1
Eagles 2-3

New Orleans is 3-1 but they play Washington tonight, followed by the Ravens, Vikings, Rams, Bengals and Eagles. After that they have 2 games against Carolina.

A #1 seed looks very attainable for the Rams.

I love Listening to Philly Sports Radio this Year!

Particularly 975THEFANATIC! Last year was bad after for the first game, seeing a perennial loser have glimmer of hope, which of course released a monster. Anthony Gargano, normally endearing, started crowing about how great Wentz was and how much the Rams got suckered by picking Goff. Gargano was dismissive about Goff even when his season was good and was Pro bowler. The Iggles were great and everybody else sucked. This made me relearn a lesson that I've had in the past, but forgot...Never let a sucker have an even break. I'll never cheer a perennial loser, because the @sswhipes will act like the 2017 Iggles and their fans. So I laugh when the losers, lose.

Do you know how great it was today for me, when doing a run down of the remaining games and realizing the Iggles might not even be in the playoffs and hearing Gargano admitting quietly that he considered the Eagles @ Rams game as being a likely loss? It made my day, Fark the Iggles!

About our LB’s...

I’m very happy with Littleton. And he’s a punt blocking demon, too.

I thought Barron had a very nice game. Especially with all the rust and after the 2 surgeries.

But the rest of our LB’s? Not even close to where they need to be. Color me disappointed with them. All the rest of them.

Maybe Obo can help when he’s cleared. Or maybe there’s an option to get a decent player from another team. I dunno. But if this doesn’t get bolstered somehow, I fear that we will be wasting the talent on our DL and in our secondary. Wade needs a pass rush for his D to really click.

Don’t know about you but I hate to place our O in the position of being forced to score into the mid thirties every week.

Team decision?

McVay in the post game saying how it was all the team's decision to go for it on 4th down.

But then Goff in the post game presser saying "I was out talking to the Ref... then it was like oh we are going for it."

I think this is McVay trying to deflect credit and give it to his team.

I think it was all his call.

Peter King: 10/8/18

These are excerpts. To read the whole article click the link below. Comments related to the Rams are up first.
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https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/10/08/nfl-week-5-cleveland-browns-fmia-peter-king/

By Peter King

• Behind the McVay call. The league’s getting gutsier, it seems. (Except for Jason Garrett.) Intriguing call for Sean McVay on Sunday at Seattle. L.A. ball, fourth and a half-yard, Rams 42, 1:39 left, no timeouts left for Seattle. High stakes here. If the Rams go for it and make it, the game’s over; they can run out the clock because Seattle has no timeouts left. If the Rams go for it and fail, Seattle needs 15 yards to be in breezy field-goal range for the winning kick.

If the Rams punt, they could likely pin the Seahawks around their 15-yard line. On the bus to the airport Sunday evening, McVay explained the call to go for it thusly: “I think the biggest thing was this: Our offensive linemen had the confidence to be able to get those six inches. I thought Jared [Goff] did an excellent job of mixing up his cadence a little bit, and I felt like he could catch them off guard.

We attack success. We don’t fear failure. We want to go for the win in that situation. Getting six inches to close it out was something that we felt the percentages were in our favor.” Smart move, and not just because it worked.

MVP Watch

Jared Goff, QB, Los Angeles Rams. This is not just Sean McVay’s influence making Goff a player. You don’t make the kind of precise throws into tight coverage the way Goff is doing with a coach pulling strings and making you a robot. Sunday in Seattle was the kind of tough struggle even the best teams are going to have to win regularly in the course of a long season.

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Todd Gurley, at $11.5-million a year average, for the next six years, is a pretty reasonable contract for the Rams. I won’t say cheap, but reasonable.

By the way, there is no way the Todd Gurley touchdown should have been reversed in Seahawks-Rams. I repeat what the NFL had been doing a good job of until the Cleveland first-down reversal late in last week’s game at Oakland: Reverse only the plays that are absolutely shown to be wrong on appeal.

The concussion suffered by Brandin Cooks is worrisome, coming on the heels of the serious one he suffered in the Super Bowl. Cooks is only 25. Two concussions in nine months is tough for him.

I think the Rams basically won the NFC West with the win in Seattle, barring some major injuries. The Rams have a three-game lead over Seattle with the tiebreaker over the Seahawks, which means they’ve got a three-and-a-half game lead in effect. And L.A. has Denver and San Francisco in the next two weeks, so 7-0 seems quite possible. All those years the Rams were finished by Dec. 1, and now they could clinch by then.
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Awaken the Sleeping Giant? Browns—Yup—Feeling Frisky

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Getty Images

The thing that’s surprised me the most about the first month of the season—even more than the fact that Philadelphia is 2-3 and hasn’t scored 24 points in any game, more than Atlanta being 1-4, more than Ryan Fitzpatrick being 18 points higher than Tom Brady in passer rating—is the Cleveland Browns. They’re fun. They’re competitive. They’ve got a quarterback out to prove the world wrong, and playing like it. They’re 2-2-1, they easily could be 4-1, and conceivably could be 5-0.

Scoring margins in the first five Browns games: 0, 3, 4, 3, 3. In the three games they lost or tied, they had the ball in opposing territory in the last minute of the fourth quarter with a chance to win. The whole year: crazytown.

You might remember back in April, when I covered the Browns draft in Cleveland and met a two-decade season-ticket-holder named Dan Adams. So mad at the Browns’ ineptitude was this middle-aged operations manager at a hydraulics company that when his ticket invoice came in the mail last spring he photocopied his hand with the middle finger sticking up and folded up the image and sent it to the Browns with these words: 1-31 and I’m done. This one’s for you. At the last moment, he relented and bought the tickets again, for one last time he said. He just couldn’t quit his Browns.

I called Dan Adams on Sunday night.

“The energy in this city is incredible right now,” he said, a few hours after the Browns’ ugly but beautiful 12-9 overtime beatdown of Baltimore, their first AFC North home win in four seasons. (Think how incredible that is.) “The Indians are great. The Cavs are great, and God bless LeBron. But there is nothing like this place when the Browns are winning—70,000 people just going nuts for their team. We’ve really missed that.”

When the draft was over, I met Cleveland GM John Dorsey near the Browns’ practice facility in Berea. He showed up in one of those funky gray sweatshirts with the block orange CLEVELAND BROWNS on the front. (Dorsey: those sweatshirts. Jim Harbaugh: the khakis.) We had a couple of beers, from Cleveland’s Great Lakes Brewing, and Dorsey dissected the draft.

Here’s what I remember about that day: Dorsey knew the draft cognoscenti wasn’t crazy about quarterback Baker Mayfield at No. 1 overall and cornerback Denzel Ward at 4. Mike Mayock, for instance, had Mayfield as his fourth-rated passer, and thought pass-rusher Bradley Chubb was a surer choice than Ward. USA Today gave the Browns’ draft the 25th-best grade out 32 teams. But Dorsey was almost fierce in his regard for both picks. And he made this declaration:

“We will awaken the sleeping giant. I have no doubt.”

Five games is too early to say anything about the Browns other than this: They’re one of the most compelling and competitive teams in the NFL. Their feisty new leader, wideout Jarvis Landry, told me Sunday he thinks they shouldn’t have lost a game yet, and when players say things like that, you just nod and laugh a little bit on the inside.

But they tied Pittsburgh when their kicker had a field goal blocked with 13 seconds left in overtime, they lost to the Saints when their kicker missed two field goals and a PAT in the fourth quarter, and they lost to Oakland when a dubious replay reversal gave the Raiders life in the final minute.

Most Sundays, I watch games in some combination on my laptop and the TV, on the RedZone Channel and whatever is the game of the day. In the last two weeks, the 45-42 loss at Oakland and the 12-9 win over Baltimore, I spent most of the second half and overtimes lasered on the Browns. The Cleveland Browns, the Browns Gonna Brown Browns. Dorsey talked about awakening the sleeping giant? He’s awake all right, now, and Baker Mayfield is the alarm clock.

“C’mere Baker!” coach Hue Jackson said in the Browns’ post-game locker room Sunday.

“Bake Money!” Jabrill Peppers shouted as Mayfield made his way to the middle of the room, next to Jackson, who wanted to give Mayfield a game ball.

“I ain’t been around you a long time, but I know this: You don’t flinch,” Jackson said. “You keep playing. You gotta keep doing that for this football team.”

With 2:12 left in overtime, the Dan Adamses of the world had to be thinking, We’ll take a tie. Browns had second-and-21 at their 5, and their four previous plays had gone for zero, zero, zero and minus-11. Mayfield, in the shotgun, took the snap at the goal line, and pressure forced him back to four yards deep in the end zone.

Here came Terrell Suggs of the Ravens, rushing from the right and making a strategic error: Instead of penning in Mayfield, Suggs tried to get to him from the middle, forcing the quarterback out to the offensive left side. No Raven was there. So Mayfield took 13 easy yards. “As I continue to get reps with [the linemen], they will realize I’m going to try to extend plays,” Mayfield said. Really?

Two-minute warning. Third-and-eight. Three Baltimore rushers surrounded Mayfield in the pocket, but he leaked out to the right, and a total unknown, undrafted wideout Derrick Willies, playing only because of an injury, had a step on his man on a crossing route. Mayfield put it right in Willies’ gut. Gain of 39. Three clock-bleeding plays put the Browns in range for a field-goal try, but if you know the Browns’ tradition of field-goal follies, you knew something would go wrong.

“I couldn’t look,” Jarvis Landry told me Sunday night. “I couldn’t look.”

Greg Joseph, whose wounded duck from 55 yards fell short and way off to the left at the end of the fourth quarter, would find a way to miss this, wouldn’t he? His low kick found a Raven’s hand going over the line of scrimmage, but instead of dying at the line, the 37-yard kick knuckled downfield and made it over the crossbar with a couple of centimeters to spare.

Mayfield led the charge, and he got some defensive help from Ward. Without Ward’s pick at the Browns’ three and then his block of a Justin Tucker field goal on the last play of the half, the Browns would never have forced overtime. This would have just been another dispiriting loss.

With three interceptions now, Ward has been just the clinging, physical corner defensive coordinator Gregg Williams wanted. It was Williams, among others, who urged the selection of Ward over Chubb—and they’re pretty happy about it now.

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There’s something else I like about this team. It’s something Jarvis Landry brought from Miami. When the Browns did “Hard Knocks” this summer, the most memorable scene was Landry, new to the team this year, lighting up the receivers room. He was ticked off (putting it mildly) at the effort and practice habits of the team’s young receivers, and he stood in front of the room and said:

“If your hamstring ain’t fallin’ off the bone, if your leg ain’t broke, you should be practicing! Straight up. It’s weakness. It’s contagious as f—! … It’s over with here, bro! If you’re not hurt, you gotta f—ing practice! That ain’t happenin’ here! That don’t exist! … It’s contagious. It’s contagious.

Coming from one of the highest-paid receivers in the league, that tirade got noticed.

“My heart was full,” Landry said. “I had no idea it would be as big as it turned out to be. But I was just trying to state the truth and wake some guys up.”

Landry thought for a minute. “With me,” he said, “what it comes down is I hate losing more than I love winning. I love football, and I just hate to lose.”

When the Browns tied Pittsburgh on opening day, Landry thought some players were a little happy to not lose. “There’s nothing to celebrate!” he yelled. “We work too hard to tie!”

On the first drive of overtime, Landry stuck his head in the offensive huddle and said, “It’s just us. Calls ain’t gonna go our way. Can’t worry about that. Just play.”

After the game, in the raucous Cleveland locker room, Dorsey found Landry. The GM loves this firebrand wideout because of the example he sets and the ethos he brings to practice and games. Dorsey smiled at Landry. “Hey!” Dorsey said. “It ain’t always gonna be easy.”

But with these Browns, it’s always going to be interesting.
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The Rest

• The Eagles don’t have much time to fix their ills.
Philadelphia, 2-3, isn’t too far gone to heal. The Eagles have lost by two, three and six points. The problem, though, is time. The Eagles have to go to the Meadowlands on Thursday night to face the struggling and enigmatic Giants, and then they have the similarly enigmatic Panthers at home, and then a game in London against the Jaguars. Not much time, particularly this week, to get right on offense and in the secondary, which are major issues.

In Carson Wentz’s three starts since returning from knee reconstruction, the Eagles are 1-2, averaging only 21.3 points a game. In his last nine games last season before getting hurt, Wentz and the Eagles went 8-1 and averaged 33.4 points a game. He’s moving in the pocket well and throwing with more precision than last year (67.2 percent this year in a smaller sample size, 60.2 last year), so I it’s smart to be patient with the passing game. It should come around.

The secondary is a worry, particularly with all the resources GM Howie Roseman added. The Eagles allowed a stingy opposing QB rating of 79.5 last year, which is superb. This year: 96.5, which is not. Philly’s lucky the rest of the division is a combined 5-8.

• Confidence game. Graham Gano is 31. Before Sunday, he’d been 18 of 32 on field goals of 50 yards or longer, and he’d never made one from 60 yards or longer in his NFL career. So to win a game the Panthers would have been heartbroken to lose, Gano had to make a field goal the length of which he hadn’t made since high school.

“I kicked a 68-yarder in high school, but there was a flag and the penalty allowed us to get a first down—so they took that field goal off the board,” he said Sunday from Charlotte. “And when I went out there today, I really didn’t feel too nervous about it. That could be because I didn’t realize it was 63 yards when I went out there.” From the Giants’ 45, coach Ron Rivera decided to try the field goal, his Panthers down to the Giants 31-30 with six seconds left.

Three points about this kick: Gano’s leg-swing seems almost casual; he certainly wasn’t trying to kill the ball. “I try to swing the same for short field goal as for a long one,” he said. “When you try to hit the ball too hard, you usually kick it wide.” … Thinking is optional, so as to avoid nerves. “As soon as the ball is snapped, I try to not think at all,” he said …

Gano really want to attempt the kick, and didn’t want to give Rivera any reason to doubt him. “I kind of just jogged on the field, to let them know I am confident.” Gano said. “John Kasay used to do that here. If he felt good about it, he’d just start jogging on the field. On this kick, my first thought when it left my foot was, That felt good.” I should hope so. Looked like it’d have been good from 70.
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The Award Section

Offensive Players of the Week

Adam Thielen, wide receiver, Minnesota. No receiver in the last half century at least has opened a season with five straight 100-yard receiving games, and even with that target on his back in a tough place to play Sunday, Thielen had seven catches for 116 yards and a touchdown. And he fell on and secured a close-call onside kick that was the final decider in the Vikings’ 23-21 victory over the Eagles, the team that beat Minnesota for the NFC title last season.

Isaiah Crowell, running back, New York Jets. He had the best game of his life and the best rushing game in Jets history. How many backs in history can say they had three runs in excess of 35 yards in one game? Crowell had 77, 54 and 36-yard runs, the long one for a first-half touchdown. Crowell’s most famous moment this season before this game had been scoring in Detroit and faux wiping his rear end with the football as if it were toilet paper. Maybe this week he can actually be known for his play.

Sony Michel and James White, running backs, New England. In the Patriots’ 1-2 start, Michel and White, combined, averaged 17 touches from scrimmage per game for just 72 yards. (Michel did not play in the first game of the season.) Scoring at a typical Patriots pace in the last last two wins (38 against Indy on Thursday night, 38 against Miami the previous Sunday), Michel and White proved how invaluable a balanced offense can be for New England.

The two backs, combined, averaged 36 touches from scrimmage per game for 206 yards. In the two decisive victories, Michel’s 210 rushing yards, plus White’s 145 chains-moving receiving yards, promise to be a good road map for the New England offense the rest of the way.

Defensive Players of the Week

T.J. Watt, pass-rusher, Pittsburgh. Is it possible another Watt will lead the NFL in sacks? He’s tied with Geno Atkins atop the league this morning after a three-sack, eight-tackle performance against the defenseless Falcons on Sunday. Watt has the same ferocious and quick-for-his-size elusiveness that made J.J. Watt so great—and consider that T.J. was a tight end for his first two injury-riddled seasons at Wisconsin.

Denzel Ward, cornerback, Cleveland. In a field-position game, Ward continued his brilliant rookie year. He intercepted a Joe Flacco pass at the Cleveland 2-yard line in the second quarter that saved points, either seven or three. And on the last play of the first half, Ward steamed from around the end to block a Justin Tucker field-goal try. Ward deflected two other passes too. Not bad. The Browns won 12-9 in overtime, an extra period that would never have been played without Ward’s second-quarter dramatics.

Special Teams Players of the Week

Graham Gano, kicker, Carolina. Picked a fine time for the longest kick of his life. He kicked two 47-yarders in the second quarter, and in the last three minutes of the game, he kicked a 39-yarder to put the Panthers up six. After the Giants went 75 fast yards to go ahead with 1:08 to play in the game, the Panthers stumbled to the Giants’ 45 and couldn’t get closer. So Gano, whose longest field goal ever had been from 59 yards, creamed a 63-yard field goal to win it.

Britton Colquitt, punter, Cleveland. Easily one of the best games of a good NFL career. Colquitt punted nine times for 50.2-yard average, with a net average of 41.4 yards per punt. Three punts pinned the Ravens inside the 20. The Browns are going to need to play this kind of field-position football while the offense stops-and-starts with so many new players.

Jakeem Grant, wide receiver/punt returner, Miami. Grant is 5-7, 169 pounds, and sometimes you watch him in the return game and just hope he doesn’t break. Grant broke the Bengals on Sunday—at least before Miami’s second-half collapse. With 22 seconds left in the first half, Grant weaved and sprinted 70 yards down the right side and then survived an oh-so-close replay review about whether he stepped out before scoring. He didn’t. Marvelous return for touchdown.

Coach of the Week

Matt Patricia, head coach, Detroit. All the rookie Lions leader has done over the past two games in Detroit is orchestrate strong game plans in wins over Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers. What Detroit lacks in consistency—it sandwiched a loss to Dallas between wins over New England and Green Bay—it makes up for in rising to the challenge in big games. Patricia’s defense got the job done Sunday, forcing three fumbles and taking advantage of sloppy play by the Packers.

Goats of the Week

Ryan Tannehill, quarterback, Miami. After Miami had a 17-0 lead with 24 minutes left, these were the next five Tannehill possessions: three-and-out, pick-six, punt, strip sack returned for a touchdown, interception. This utterly pathetic display by Tannehill followed a worse one last week. He left trailing the Patriots 38-0. The Dolphins, thanks to these two forgettable games by Tannehill and his friends, are the same old Dolphins, despite the 3-2 record.

Blake Bortles, quarterback, Jacksonville. You would hope Bortles had days like this one in his rearview mirror. But he doesn’t. This was a stinker, one of the most misleading 400-yard-passing days in NFL history. Bortles had to throw for 400 (430, to be exact, on 33 of 61 passing) because he kept putting the Jaguars in holes with his five turnovers on the day.

Mason Crosby, kicker, Green Bay. Packers lost by eight in Detroit. Crosby left an amazing 13 points off the board with his four missed field goals and one missed PAT. When your offense is beat up and has to score in the high twenties, minimum, to have a chance to win consistently, you can’t have an errant kicker.

Crosby missed from 41 yards with the Packers down 7-0; then missed from 42 with the Packers down 17-0; then missed from 38 with the Packers down 17-0; then missed the PAT with the Packers down 11; then missed from 56 with the Packers down 11. You’ve really got to wonder how this game will mentally impact Crosby in the future.
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Things I Think I Think

1. I think these are my quick-hit thoughts of Week 5:

a. Russell Wilson was vintage MVP-contender Russell Wilson for much of the 33-31 loss to the Rams, leading five scoring drives in nine possessions and compiling a 132.5 passer rating. But 48 net yards for the Seahawks in the fourth quarter sealed their fate.

b. Miami first three weeks: 3-0 … Dolphins 75, Foes 52.

c. Miami last two weeks: 0-2 … Foes 65, Dolphins 24.

d. DeAndre Hopkins was one of my two all-pro receivers in 2017. Judging by his incredible catch and run in overtime last night against Dallas, I like his chances to repeat.

e. Todd Gurley, at $11.5-million a year average, for the next six years, is a pretty reasonable contract for the Rams. I won’t say cheap, but reasonable.

f. By the way, there is no way the Todd Gurley touchdown should have been reversed in Seahawks-Rams. I repeat what the NFL had been doing a good job of until the Cleveland first-down reversal late in last week’s game at Oakland: Reverse only the plays that are absolutely shown to be wrong on appeal.

g. The concussion suffered by Brandin Cooks is worrisome, coming on the heels of the serious one he suffered in the Super Bowl. Cooks is only 25. Two concussions in nine months is tough for him.

h. Stephen Weatherly, the Minnesota defensive end getting some playing time with Everson Griffenout, will be a footnote to the Vikings’ 23-21 win in Philadelphia. He shouldn’t be. He strip-sacked Carson Wentz and allowed Linval Joseph to capitalize and run 64 yards for the touchdown.

i. For as talented as Martavis Bryant is, and he’s supremely talented, he’s not worth the trouble. His fumble at the Chargers on Sunday … just inexcusable. Never mind all his off-field stuff.

j. Never really thought Josh Allen would be as nimble and good making people miss in the open field as he is.

k. Tremendous job, Mike Adams of Carolina, getting two picks against the Giants, his nearby home-town team. Adams is from nearby Paterson, N.J., the home of Victor Cruz too.

l. Tackling optional for the Giants, obviously.

m. But that was a classic Eli Manning comeback. From the pinnacle to the depths to a comeback in the last couple of minutes when you were sure he had no chance.

n. Play of the Day: The 104-yard interception return by Jets safety Marcus Maye … and the most amazing part of it was Denver rookie Courtland Sutton wrangling Maye down at the half-yard line. Just weird.

o. Catch of the Day: Terrelle Pryor’s physical one-hander in the end zone from Sam Darnold in garbage time for the Jets. Brilliant catch.

p. Why oh why would Seattle’s Quinton Jefferson shove Jared Goff down significantly after the end of a play, earning the easiest roughing-the-passer call of the 2018 season? Has Jefferson not paid attention to the NFL in 2018? Does he think it’s 1988?

q. The great thing about JuJu Smith-Schuster that isn’t talked about nearly enough: his physical sure-handedness, illustrated again on his first-quarter touchdown, climbing high in the end zone to pick it out of the air, getting whacked by cornerback Robert Alford and then the ground—and hanging onto the ball.

r. The calendar just turned to October last week, and Patrick Mahomes has 16 touchdowns. Every week it’s another stat that blows you away with this guy.

s. Kenny Golladay, with a 60-yard reception, continues to show he’s the latest in the line of Mid-American Conference receivers (Golladay went to Northern Illinois) to verge on NFL stardom.

t. Looks bad for the Packers. So hurt, and so reliant on the quarterback who clearly is not whole.

u. Frank Reich knows his offense can’t be all Andrew Luck, all the time. But the Colts are just beat up right now, and Reich feels, obviously, like he has no choice.

v. Inexcusable rookie mistake by Luck, throwing the almost panicky quick throw for a pick in the last minute of the first half in New England.

w. This Used to Be a Rivalry Dept.: Since 2010, the Colts have lost eight straight to the Patriots. Average margin: 18.4 points.

2. I think the Giants/Beckham controversy will be deodorized because of the way the Giants came back and the cool touchdown pass Odell Beckham threw. But his selfish comments to Josina Anderson of ESPN have to be making the Giants wonder if he’s got the maturity to be a cornerstone player for the team for the long haul. The key moments with Anderson:

Anderson: Is there an issue at quarterback for the Giants?
Beckham: “Uh, I don’t know …”
Anderson: Are you unhappy in New York?
Beckham: “That’s a tough question.”

It continued in Charlotte, where Beckham was totally unaware where a punt was falling, got hit by the ball, and the Panthers recovered it in the end zone for a touchdown. He made some big plays after that, including the clever 57-yard touchdown pass to Saquon Barkley, and caught eight passes for 131 yards.

But there’s no excusing the comments he made, and coach Pat Shurmur—who Jay Glazer reported was livid over what Beckham said—is going to have to air him out today in East Rutherford, if he didn’t on the plane from Charlotte to Newark last night.

3. I think Cincinnati’s win over Miami taught me three things: Thou shalt never again take 30-year-old franchise defensive disruptor Geno Atkins (two sacks, six on the year now) for granted … Third-round rookie defensive Sam Hubbard was a steal for the Bengals last April, and he continued to show it with a spry 19-yard game-clinching fumble return for touchdown …

And that was a gut-check win, with 24 points in 13 fourth-quarter minutes to embarrass the Dolphins. Glad I picked the Bengals to win the AFC North, because after five weeks, Cincinnati is the team that not only has the division lead but also is the most solid team top to bottom in the division.

4. I think if the NFL Players Association wants a cause for the 2021 negotiations, Thursday night football might be it. I’m like you, probably: The specter of a good game on Thursday night is like an extra scoop of ice cream on the sundae. Tom Brady’s on TV tonight? Count me in.

But in the last two weeks, here’s what you’ve asked players to do: for the Minnesota Vikings, fly three hours on a Tuesday to Los Angeles without having all of the game plan installed for a game against the hottest team in football, the Rams; and for the Indianapolis Colts, fly to New England and play a game against the defending conference champions four days after a five-quarter OT game against the Texans on a 73-degree sunny day. Here’s what the Colts had to deal with Thursday night:

• Normally 45 players of a team’s 53-man roster dress for a game. The Colts had only 42 healthy bodies to play.

• Missing for the Colts: both starting tackles (Anthony Castonzo and Denzelle Good), their best wide receiver (T.Y. Hilton) and tight end (Jack Doyle), the NFL’s leading tackler (linebacker Darius Leonard). When linebacker Anthony Walker went out with a concussion in the first quarter and safety Clayton Geathers left with a neck injury later, that left the Colts to play the vast majority of the game against the Patriots without their three leading tacklers.

• Ten Colts played 90 or more snaps against Houston. In the span of five days, five Colts (Matt Slauson, Quenton Nelson, Le’Raven Clark, Andrew Luck, Ryan Kelly) played more than 170 snaps. Defensive lineman Margus Hunt played 169.

• The league is more conscious than ever about keeping quarterbacks healthy. One of the biggest quarterback billboards in football, Luck, coming off 20 months away from football with a serious shoulder injury, had to play 174 snaps five days apart. Luck threw 121 passes and took 129 pass-drops or shotgun sets in the span of five days.

5. I think Thursday night is a huge money-maker for the league, and thus for the players; it’s very likely not going away, particularly now that the league has made a far better Thursday night schedule to accomodate free-spending FOX. But Thursday night football will always be the yeah-but element to those in the league saying they’re doing everything humanly possible about player safety.

However (and this is a big however), I do want to make one last point about these short-week games: Over the years, I have met players and one coach—Mike McCarthy—who have pointed out that the side benefit to the Thursday games is the mini-bye that follows. That cannot be forgotten when discussing the effect of the Thursday games on players’ health.

Some coaches give their players Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday off after the Thursday games, and that five days of rest in midseason can be invaluable to players. So I do not dismiss the Thursday games as altogether bad for player health. But don’t tell that to the Colts today. They just had to play the best team this century with half a team.

6. I think the Rams basically won the NFC West with the win in Seattle, barring some major injuries. The Rams have a three-game lead over Seattle with the tiebreaker over the Seahawks, which means they’ve got a three-and-a-half game lead in effect. And L.A. has Denver and San Francisco in the next two weeks, so 7-0 seems quite possible. All those years the Rams were finished by Dec. 1, and now they could clinch by then.

Gritty win in a type of game they may have lost last year

Good job maintaining composure in a game that was back and forth with a lot of big plays. Sometimes one team can take the momentum away with big plays and the Rams didn't allow that. Rather they came back with their own and just kept moving the chains to the tune of 30 first downs. The second time they have done that in 5 games. Wow.

Getting a 4th Q comeback win on the road versus a division rival playing for their lives with the memory of a completely humiliating defeat could be a recipe for a loss, but not for this years Rams.

Lots of things to like, and lots to clean up.

A few of my thoughts.

Likes.........

I feel like this team "grew up" yesterday. As young as they are there seems to be a sense of maturity and confidence even on a bad day.

The OL is doing a fantastic job run and pass blocking. I find myself thinking "get rid of it!!!" because Goff has so much time and it's a reflex to think that when a QB has the ball for 3+ seconds. Speaking of.........

Goff is blossoming into an absolutely outstanding player. He looks like a guy who has been playing for years. He has developed the pocket awareness of a vet, and his footwork is fantastic.

Despite giving up 3 TD's (it was that kind of game) the pass defense was good overall. They came up with stops when they had to. They gave up 3 big gainers but most of the time they got the job done. In the 4th quarter Wilson was 1-4.

Gurley. Once again he and Goff are the best backfield in the NFL. He's productive in every phase, running, receiving and blocking. He's approaching that Faulk level effect on games. He's got a different style, and they are different players, but he is making a difference at nearly that level.


To clean up..........

McVay needs to lay off the cute stuff in the red zone, especially deep in it. The empty backfield play where the ball was tipped and picked of was a poor decision by both Goff and McVay. Lining up Gurley in the slot and sending out 5 guys just creates traffic in the end zone. From the 2 yard line the call is Gurley. Goff should have thrown that ball into the stands.

As discussed the run defense is now an urgent problem. I'm not sure what the solution is, maybe more 4 man fronts would help. Any thoughts? The Broncos are up next, on their field, they need a win..........and they can run the ball. #2 in total yards and they are #1 in YPA at 5.6 so a fix is important.

Woods on the jet sweep isn't making the defenses budge. He's just not a breakaway threat and while he has decent speed he isn't going to scare a defense coming out of the backfield trying to turn a corner. Cooks should be the only one used for this play and he has just 2 rushes all year. In order for the play to work and make defenses move at least once a game he has to actually get the ball on the sweep. It has to be a real threat not an empty decoy.

The Rams did get some good news on both players(Kupp/Woods) after the game

Brandin Cooks, Cooper Kupp 'doing really well' after suffering concussions
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By: Cameron DaSilva | 14 hours ago

The Los Angeles Rams had to play the majority of the game without Brandin Cooks after he suffered a concussion in the second quarteragainst the Seattle Seahawks. He never returned, but to make matters worse, they also lost another starting wide receiver.

Cooper Kupp suffered a concussion of his own in the second half and was unable to return. Both players were put in the concussion protocol, causing panic among Rams fans everywhere. Cooks’ head injury looked particularly bad as he suffered a nasty helmet-to-helmet hit in the open field, seemingly causing him to lose consciousness as he went to the ground.

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The Rams did get some good news on both players after the game, though. Sean McVay provided an update in his postgame press conference:

“They’re doing really well right now. Obviously they’ll be in the protocol, but in terms of the way they checked out, signs are pointing in a positive direction, if that means anything. I know that if you’re still experiencing some of those symptoms, then that’s when you’re starting to get concerned. But those guys feel good and they were able to have normal conversations just seeing them in the locker room,” McVay said. “I know they wanted to come back but ultimately, we want to be smart with those things. Hopefully we’ll get those guys back this week, but nothing more important than being smart about that.”

Both Kupp and Cooks will have to go through the league’s concussion protocol and won’t be able to play until they pass those important tests, but it sounds like they’re doing well in the initial phases of the process.

https://theramswire.usatoday.com/20...-brandin-cooks-cooper-kupp-concussion-update/

MNF: Redskins at Saints

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https://athlonsports.com/nfl/monday...s-vs-new-orleans-saints-prediction-picks-2018

Monday Night Football: Washington Redskins vs. New Orleans Saints

Week 5 of the NFL slate concludes with Washington coming off of its bye to face New Orleans in the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. This games actually pits a pair of division leaders (entering Week 5), with the Redskins (2-1) benefitting from playing one less game than the rest of their NFC East compatriots, while the Saints (3-1) currently sit atop the NFC South having rattled off three straight wins.

Washington enters this game well rested. This will be the Redskins' first game in 14 days. They are currently 2-0 against NFC team, with both wins (Packers, Cardinals) coming on the road. Their only loss thus far came in Week 2 at home to the Colts.

New Orleans is coming off of a 33-18 road win over the Giants. After allowing New York to score a touchdown on its first possession, the Saints' defense clamped, as the Giants did not score again until two minutes remained in the third quarter. New Orleans moved the ball on offense, but had to settle for four field goals in the first half. The second half was a different story, as Alvin Kamara punctuated three dives by running it in for a touchdown.

Washington at New Orleans

Kickoff: Monday, Oct. 8 at 8:15 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN
Spread: Saints -6.5

Three Things to Watch

1. The return of Mark Ingram
Ingram’s four-game suspension ended the day after the Saints returned from New York. Comments from players and coaches indicate that he has remained in great shape. He may actually find himself at an advantage by not having endured any injuries and fatigue from four games as his teammates might have.

Ingram’s return should boost the Saints’ offense though Drew Brees and crew have fared quite successfully so far without Ingram. New Orleans is third in the NFL in scoring (34.3 ppg) and fourth in total offense (418.3 ypg). The Saints are averaging 25.3 first downs per game, second only to the Rams. Even more important, New Orleans has just four turnovers on the season, as Brees has not thrown an interception in 161 attempts.

Will head coach Asshole Face be able to plug Ingram back into the offense without disrupting its high level of efficacy? How will the backfield touches be distributed now that Kamara has his tag-team partner back?

2. The return of Adrian Peterson

Peterson began last season in New Orleans. He played in the first four games, posting just 81 rushing yards and no touchdowns on 27 carries. As Peterson struggled with his new team, Kamara began to be more involved. The end result? Peterson was traded to Arizona prior to Week 5 and Kamara went on to win AP Offensive Rookie of the Year honors.

After signing with Washington in late August, Peterson has experienced a rebirth with the Redskins. His addition was out of need after second-round pick Derrius Guice tore his ACL in the first preseason game. Given a new opportunity, Peterson has excelled, with 236 rushing yards and three touchdowns in his first three games. His 78.7 rushing yards per game average is fifth in the NFL.

For Peterson, Monday night presents him with an opportunity to shine under the Superdome lights, something he wasn't able to do in his brief tenure in a Saints uniform. Will he show his former team and the fan base that he still has plenty left in the tank

3. The role(s) that Taysom Hill will play this week

Hill is a football-playing human version of a Swiss Army knife. So far this season, he has rushed the ball seven times for 67 yards. He has completed one of his two pass attempts for 10 yards. He caught the one pass which Brees threw to him although it resulted in a four-yard loss. He has returned five kickoffs for an average of 25.4 yards.

What kind of trick plays featuring Hill does Payton have in his back pocket? Hill has already completed a pass on a fake punt. He has lined up in shotgun formation with Brees lining up as a wide receiver. On those plays, Hill has run the ball, pitched it to a running back or thrown it.

Will this game demand one or more significant plays by Hill? He has not served as the holder on field goals or extra points though inserting him could be an opportunity for a fake. Could he line up in the backfield, either as quarterback or to take a pitch from Brees with a run/pass option? Might viewers see Hill split out as a receiver?

Final Analysis

Washington's defense has contributed mightily to its success so far, holding opponents to just 14.7 points per game. The Redskins also are limiting teams to 278 yards per contest. If they can maintain those numbers, Washington has a strong chance of leaving the Superdome with a victory.

After a slow start, New Orleans has steadily improved. The opener was filled with defensive breakdowns, and then the Saints followed that up by winning two nail-biters. Last week, they pushed around the Giants after halftime. Is this team finally ready to put together a complete four quarters?

There's additional incentive for New Orleans with this game. Drew Brees needs just 201 passing yards to surpass Peyton Manning as the NFL's all-time leader. Considering that he has averaged 323.8 yards per game this season, that record seems sure to be broken. Asshole Face no doubt wants Brees to do so at home, in front of a national TV audience.

Viewers also should expect Mark Ingram to play like a fuming bull that has just been freed from his pen. Four weeks of frustrating idleness will lead to his trampling of Redskins defenders. Brees will get his record, but Ingram will be the star of the night.

Prediction: Saints 31, Redskins 20

It felt like a loss

I know the Rams won, but struggling against an inferior Seattle team, that was maybe more motivated by revenge, made that game feel like a loss. I expected an easier, maybe two touchdown win.

Sure the refs sucked and Pete cheated with the radios, but the rosters are not closely matched, neither is the coaching staff IMO.

Is Marcus Peters coachable?

Nobody disputes he has talent and makes plays. When he gets beat, though, it’s usually for a TD and that compromises the entire defense. Surely he’s smart enough to know that.

During interviews, he’s generally dismissive. Now, I get it...he fields some dumb@ssed questions that would irritate most people and he really does his best not to be a jerk about it. But I wonder how he really is with the coaches. Do they have to tip toe around him or can they shoot straight? I’m not really sure. I can’t imagine benching him would be wise. Talib may be hurt but he isn’t mute and probably the only one with cred enough to make a difference.

But to me, he isn’t the guy I would lock up long term. Honestly, I’d rather have Hill on the cheap than Peters on a max contract. What say you?

Rams defeat Seahawks; game recaps

https://www.therams.com/news/overcoming-turnovers-and-injuries-rams-defeat-seahawks-33-31

Overcoming Turnovers and Injuries, Rams Defeat Seahawks 33-31

SEATTLE — Los Angeles faced adversity with injuries and missed opportunities throughout the game, but was still able to come away with a 33-31 victory over Seattle to improve to 5-0 on the season.

L.A. had two chances to put points on the board early in the game, but came away empty on both possessions. With JoJo Natson inactive, safety Blake Countess took back the opening kickoff to the visitors 39. But the offense sputtered to a rare three-and-out.

The defense did its job to force a punt, and linebacker Cory Littleton did what he does best — block a punt. With punter Michael Dickson kicking deep in his own territory, Littleton burst through the left side of the return team and got his hand on the ball. It went five yards to the right, were safety Marqui Christian was there to recover the loose ball. Christian returned it 11 yards to the Seattle 13-yard line.

Though the Rams were able to get down to the Seattle two-yard line, quarterback Jared Goff’s pass to running back Todd Gurley was tipped in the end zone and intercepted by defensive end Frank Clark.

The Seahawks took advantage of the extra possession, going down the field to score a six-yard rushing touchdown from running back Mike Davis.

Down 7-0, L.A. came back to tie the game with a two-yard score from Gurley. On the first play of the series, Goff completed a deep cross off play action to Kupp for 27 yards, getting L.A. in Seattle territory.

But Gurley would do the rest, taking a swing pass 19 yards, and a handoff 16 yards before going into the end zone on a two-yard run. With kicker Cairo Santos’ extra point, L.A. tied the game.

With No. 30’s plunge into the end zone, he became the first player with a touchdown in eight consecutive regular-season games since Jamaal Charles back in 2014.

The Rams would have an opportunity to go up by a touchdown early in the second quarter to cap a long drive. But a shovel pass from Goff to Gurley came up one-yard short on the left side, and Gurley was stuffed on 3rd-and-goal from the one. Los Angeles settled for a Santos 19-yard field goal to go up 10-7.

Seattle came right back, with Wilson connecting with wideout Tyler Lockett on a 39-yard deep pass to go up 14-10. But L.A. got the lead back with an eight-play, 70-yard drive that got down the field in a hurry. Goff completions to Gurley and Kupp advanced the visitors into Seattle territory. Tight end Tyler Higbee then made a strong-awareness catch after a ball over the middle went off of Kupp, as Higbee caught it and ran for 17 yards.

A few plays later, Goff faked to Gurley on the left, rolled to his right and hit Kupp. The wide receiver made a man miss and went into the end zone for a six-yard touchdown.

Seattle, however, tied the game at 17 with a 52-yard field goal with 1:55 left in the second quarter. Though Los Angeles made it down to the home team’s 30 on their ensuing two-minute drill, the offense went backwards from there. Goff ended up firing a Hail Mary pass to end the second quarter and was intercepted in the end zone — marking Goff’s first multi-interception game since Week 5 against Seattle in 2017.

Defensive stops were hard to come by early in the second half, as the Seahawks outscored the Rams 14-7 in the third quarter. Seattle scored a touchdown on the opening possession of the half, driving 75 yards in nine plays. Wilson made an off-schedule play to get the ball to wide receiver David Moore in the back of the end zone for a three-yard touchdown.

Los Angeles came back on the ensuing drive to go 64 yards in nine plays, ending with a Gurley two-yard touchdown to tie the game. With wideouts Brandin Cooks and Cooper Kupp both sidelined by a concussion, wide receivers Josh Reynolds and KhaDarel Hodge had to sub in. Reynolds caught passes for 22 and 17 yards, then took a jet sweep for 10 yards on the possession. With 3rd-and-goal from the Seattle two, Gurley ran it in behind some strong blocking from his offensive line, and the extra point tied the game at 24.

But the topsy-turvy nature of the game continued, with the Seahawks once again taking the lead with a 30-yard touchdown pass from Wilson to Moore. Los Angeles had trouble stopping the run on that possession, with running back Chris Carson taking a 21-yard carry on 3rd-and-1 from the Seattle 45 to keep the drive alive.

The Rams responded with a touchdown of their own, getting going with a 56-yard run on a jet sweep to the right by wideout Robert Woods. L.A. went for it on 4th-and-2 from the 10, and got some help as the Seahawks were called for defensive pass interference to give the visitors a first down. Gurley then ran it in from five-yards out for his third touchdown of the game.

Santos, however, missed the extra point to keep the score at 31-30, Seattle.

Needing a big stop, the defense finally tightened up and got one. Rushing from the left end on 3rd-and-10 from the Seattle 36, defensive lineman Ndamukong Suh took down Wilson for his third sack of the season.

After a punt, Los Angeles got the ball at its own 18 but was able to go down the field to take the lead. Goff connected with Woods on consecutive completions of 20 and 17 yards, putting L.A. scoring position. While the drive stalled just before the club could get into the red zone, Santos connected on a 39-yard field goal to give L.A. a 33-31 lead.

Wilson looked like he put Seattle in scoring position on the ensuing drive with a 44-yard pass to Lockett. But a false start and offensive holding put Seattle in a bad spot. On 2nd-and-23, Littleton batted the ball away at the line of scrimmage. And on 3rd down, Littleton forced Wilson to throw the ball away.

After a punt, the Rams were able to get a first down, but came up short on the ensuing set of downs on a third-down run by Gurley. Going for it on 4th-and-short, Goff took a QB sneak for two yards to the L.A. 44. With Seattle having taken its final timeout, the Rams were able to take two kneel downs for a big victory on the road.

With the win, Los Angeles is 5-0. The club will be back on the road next week to play the Broncos.

https://www.therams.com/news/goff-converts-fourth-down-sneak-to-secure-victory-over-seahawks

Goff Converts Fourth-Down Sneak to Secure Victory over Seahawks

SEATTLE
— To describe it as politely as possible, it was a... "gutsy" call.

The Rams got the ball back up 33-31 with 3:28 left. Running back Todd Gurley took a second-down handoff ostensibly for a first down, but the ball was spotted a yard short. Then Gurley took a third-down handoff and the ball was spotted about a foot short of the line to gain after a measurement.

Seattle head coach Pete Carroll took his third and final timeout with 1:39 remaining. That’s when things got — as we're going to keep calling it — gutsy.


“I think we got the first down on every single carry,” wide receiver Robert Woods said. He wanted a better spot on those third- and fourth-down plays.

Los Angeles’ punt team was on the field when Carroll used his timeout. Even though L.A. was close to the line to gain, it would’ve been the safe football move to have punter Johnny Hekker boot the ball down the field, forcing the Seahawks to drive down the field with no timeouts to score.

But hearing head coach Sean McVay tell the tale, the Rams’ offense was adamant — the unit wanted to stay on the field to win the game.

“Initially we talked about punting it,” McVay said postgame. “You look at the belief that they had and how much they wanted to do and because of their belief, it made me feel confident — it made us as a coaching staff feel confident to make that decision.”

What was that mindset like?

“We wanted to go for it,” right tackle Rob Havenstein said plainly.

So, decision made. The Rams would go for it.

But even though some members of the offense were on the field and ready, others weren’t.

“I can’t remember why — I think during a T.V. timeout, maybe they called a timeout — I can’t remember, we had a lot of time to decide,” quarterback Jared Goff said. “He was kind of going back and forth. I was off [the field] — I thought we were punting. I went back on the field just to talk to one of the officials about something and as I’m turning around, the offense is running back on. So I was like, ‘OK, I guess we are going for it.’”

“I was actually sitting on the bench with my helmet on the ground, then I realized the whole offense was out there, so I took off running,” left tackle Andrew Whitworth said. “I was already pouting — I was in full pout mode on the sideline and then realized the whole offense was out there, so I took off running.”

“We were all off the field and then I just see Goff running back on, and I’m just like, ‘Oh snap,’” Gurley said. “So we just kind of did that and everything took care of itself.”

So maybe it wasn’t as simple as McVay and Havenstein made it seem. But the Rams got in an offensive huddle for one play to get to 5-0 — a quarterback sneak.

https://www.therams.com/news/seven-stats-rams-edge-out-the-seahawks-33-31

Seven Stats: Rams Edge Out the Seahawks 33-31

The Rams played football away from the L.A. Coliseum for the first time in three weeks on Sunday, traveling to Seattle for their first divisional road test of the season against the Seahawks.

The Rams defeated the Seahawks 33-31 in a shootout, led by running back Todd Gurley, who added three touchdowns to his 2018 total. Gurley’s Rams are now 5-0 for the first time since 2001.

Here are seven stats that stood out in Week 5 against the Seahawks:

1.ENTER CAIRO SANTOS

Los Angeles sent out its third different kicker of the season on Sunday. The Rams signed recent journeyman kicker Cairo Santos earlier this week after waiving All-Pro kicker Greg Zuerlein’s first replacement, Sam Ficken.

Santos was 100 percent on field goals in his debut as a Ram, hitting two attempts.

Santos did, however, miss an extra point following the Rams’ fourth touchdown of the game, leaving the Seahawks up by a point early in the fourth quarter.

Santos redeemed himself on the following fourth quarter offensive possession, hitting what became a game-winning 39-yard field goal to put the Rams back in the lead, 33-31.

2. DONALD’S SACK

Defensive tackle Aaron Donald sacked Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson for the eighth time in his career late in the first quarter.

Donald took Wilson down for a loss of seven yards on the first play of Seattle’s third drive of the game.

Donald’s sack puts him seventh on the Rams’ all-time sack list with 42.0 career sacks. The defensive tackle surpassed Grant Wistrom (41q.5) in the Rams history books.

Donald has sacked Wilson more than any other quarterback (8.0).

3. ROAD SUCCESS

L.A.’s hard-fought victory on Sunday means five-straight wins on the road for head coach Sean McVay, dating back to Week 13 of 2017.

The 2018 edition of the Rams is now the sixth team in the club’s history to win five consecutive road games. The last team to win five in a row on the road was the 2001 Super Bowl runner-up Rams, who went a perfect 8-0 on the road.

4. LITTLETON

Linebacker Cory Littleton once again showed off his special teams ability on Sunday against the Seahawks.

On Seahawks punter Michael Dickerson’s first punt of the game, Littleton burst across the line of scrimmage and blocked his second punt of the season. Safety Marqui Christian easily watched the ball into his hands and returned the blocked punt to Seattle’s 13 yardline.

Littleton now has two consecutive seasons with multiple blocked punts, and four blocked punts since the start of 2017, which is the most in the NFL in that time.

5. GOFF GOES FOR 300 AGAIN

Quarterback Jared Goff once again moved the Rams offense down the field effectively in Week 5.

Goff finished his day in Seattle 23-of-32, good for a 71 percent completion percentage, with 321 yards, one touchdown, and two interceptions.

Goff’s 300-yard performance marks the first time he has thrown for 300-yards or better in fourth-consecutive weeks in his young career.

6. GURLEY, GURLEY, GURLEY

With both wide receivers Brandin Cooks and Cooper Kupp leaving Sunday’s game in the first half, head coach Sean McVay relied on running back Todd Gurley to put points on the board.

Gurley stayed busy against the Seahawks and “The 12th Man,” carrying the ball 22 times for 77 yards and three rushing touchdowns. Goff found Gurley successfully in 5-of-6 targets through the air, for 36-yards.

Gurley’s three touchdowns against the Seahawks marks the second time this season he has finished a game with three total touchdowns. The former Georgia Bulldog also tallied three touchdowns against the Cardinals in Week 2.

Gurley leads all Rams with nine touchdowns through five games in 2018.

7. SAFFOLD’S 100th

Finally, veteran left guard Rodger Saffold made his 100th career start on Sunday.

Saffold joins four other Rams who have started in over 100 NFL games, including fellow offensive linemen, left tackle Andrew Whitworth and center John Sullivan.

Saffold and his O-line has done an excellent job of protecting Goff through four games, and this Sunday was no different. Goff only took on sack in Sunday’s victory.

The starting left guard won in Seattle for the third time in the last four years on Sunday.

Ram fans in St. Louis

Curious to know if there are still many St. Louis Rams fans on these boards and still cheering and pulling for the Rams. Also, are there many Rams fans in St. Louis and the surrounding communities still fans who get together and watch the games? I recall reading in the Los Angeles Times about a group of friends in Illinois who used to leave their homes in an RV at 5 in the morn to arrive in time to tailgate at the Edward Jones Dome before the big games. Are they still Ram fans? Do they make the trip to Los Angeles to watch the team in person?

Please LMK.

Thanks SLR - Ram fan since Harland Svare was their coach and remained a die-hard fan while the team was based in the Midwest.

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