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Thursday’s PFT PM features a chat with Robert Woods

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/01/04/thursdays-pft-pm-features-a-chat-with-robert-woods/

Thursday’s PFT PM features a chat with Robert Woods
Posted by Mike Florio on January 4, 2018

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Getty Images

Robert Woods played for the Bills last year and the Rams this year. Both had gone a long time without qualifying for the playoffs. Both have now made it back.

Woods and the Rams will host a playoff game at the L.A. Coliseum for the first time in nearly 40 years on Saturday night. During a visit to PFT PM, Woods discussed his first year with the team, why he chose the Rams, the importance of a loud crowd during the wild-card game against the Falcons, and plenty more.

The Thursday edition of PFT PM also includes discussion of a variety of NFL topics (regarding the Packers, Raiders, and Eagles), a lengthy Twitter-based question-and-answer session, and the long-awaited (not really) story behind “you’re better than that.”

As you know by now, we’re not better than that, or anything else. Hopefully, you’re not better than pressing play in the box below to hear everything that was said during the PFT PM podcast.

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Click link and scroll down to listen to podcast.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/01/04/thursdays-pft-pm-features-a-chat-with-robert-woods/

NFL suffers 9.7 percent drop in TV ratings for regular season

NFL suffers 9.7 percent drop in TV ratings for regular season

https://www.thescore.com/nfl/news/1460688

The NFL experienced a 9.7 percent drop in television ratings during the 2017 regular season, according to Nielsen numbers reported by Darren Rovell of ESPN.

Games averaged 1.6 million fewer viewers than last season.

The NFL's drop in viewership is consistent with other TV programming, as cable subscriptions continue to decline. But the Nielsen data still shows that 20 of the top 30 highest-rated shows in 2017 were NFL games.

NBC's Sunday Night Football and ESPN's Monday Night Football remain the most watched shows every week in all key male demographics. It's the seventh consecutive year that Sunday Night Football finished as the No. 1 primetime show in fall.

As Rovell notes, the dip in ratings has been at least partially attributed to Thursday Night Football and the expansion of the TV product.

The league also dealt with controversial player protests during the national anthem this season and a subsequent spat with President Donald Trump, which turned off some fans.

Names of training camps past: what a difference a season makes

Was looking at an old article about Kevin Peterson and saw the name Nelson Spruce.... I thought "whoa, I had completely forgot about that guy already." And I was high on Spruce making the roster in training camp. Man, what a difference a winning season makes. Seasons past I'd still be hoping for most of these names to finally make that next step to only be disappointed year in and year out. But anyway, random thread for the hell of it. Who else from the last few seasons did we all expect to be the next big thing?

Names long gone and forgotten:
Nelson Spruce- On the Bears PS
Brandon Shippen
Paul McRoberts- recently released from PS... was high on him too
Louis Trinca-Pasat- out of the league
Josh Forest- on Seahawks IR
Mike Jordan- on the Browns
Corey Harkey- out of league... many assumed to have large role still this season
Shakeir Ryan- Made a few splash returns in preseason. So small though... Redskins PS I think.
Aaron Green- Bills PS
Brian Quick- as useless to the Redskins as he was for us

Names not seen but not forgotten. Could make splash next season:
Temarick Hemingway- could be a huge player next season
Sam Rogers- Was never high on this draft pick but maybe?
Dominique Easley- super injury prone... not sure if we'll see again

Rampage Radio Podcast #2 with JRob and J

Here is no. 2. We cover a lot on this one and really enjoy being able to bring this to everyone. Remember, we are just starting out, so our twitter is pretty bleak and such. I will be bumping this thread a couple of times during the next couple of days before the big game. Thanks for tuning in!

Login to view embedded media View: https://soundcloud.com/user-721510654/rampage-radio-eps-2-playoff-vs-falcons

View: https://soundcloud.com/user-721510654/rampage-radio-eps-2-playoff-vs-falcons

Downtown Rams Podcast Ep.51 feat. Joe Curley

The NFL playoffs are set to begin this weekend and Jake and Blaine have it all right here to help break it down. The guys discuss the Rams' road to the Super Bowl and who their toughest opponent might be. They also break down the AFC and who could represent them in the Super Bowl. Joe Curley of the Ventura County Star joins the show.

iTUNES:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast...rley-part-1/id1233567831?i=1000399000528&mt=2


SPREAKER: https://www.spreaker.com/user/downtownrams/nfl-playoff-preview-feat-joe-curley

Sammy Watkins on impending free agency: 'I'm looking forward to staying'

http://theramswire.usatoday.com/201...-rams-sammy-watkins-free-agent-contract-2018/

http://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/la-sp-falcons-rams-watkins-20180102-story.html

I was surprised this wasn't posted here already. I searched and didn't see it (sorry if I missed it).

“I love it here,” Watkins told the L.A. Times. “I don’t want to change teams. That’s not what a guy of my stature wants to do, bounce around. I’ve got a family so I’m looking forward to staying. But you know it’s a business.”

Congrats

To all you die hards, congrats on finally having a team back in the playoffs.

I haven't watched a Rams game since they left St. Louis and haven't watched a single NFL game this season. Safe to say I'm not exactly rooting for the Rams success these days but I am happy for all you fellas that have something worth watching after all these years!

Hope all of you are doing well in your personal lives. I've been busy with a toddler and my wife is pregnant with our next one. I miss having a team to drive downtown and root for but overall I have to say that my Sundays are much more productive and fulfilling!

Jon Gruden to target Rams QBs coach Greg Olson

Jon Gruden to target Rams QBs coach Greg Olson
http://theramswire.usatoday.com/201...raiders-jon-gruden-greg-olson-coaching-staff/

In one offseason, the Los Angeles Rams not only overhauled their roster, but more importantly, their coaching staff. By bringing in Sean McVay, the Rams entrusted a 31-year-old, first-year head coach to put together a group that could change the culture in L.A.


That’s exactly what he and his staff did, but the Rams could be in danger of losing one key member of the unit. According to multiple reports, Jon Gruden, who’s expected to be hired by the Raiders as their next head coach, will target Rams quarterbacks coach Greg Olson for his staff.

Two more names I'm hearing as potential Jon Gruden staff hires: @RamsNFL QBs coach Greg Olson & @ChicagoBears o-line coach Jeremiah Washburn. Gruden had Olson on his @TBBuccaneers staff. @sportingnews

— Alex Marvez (@alexmarvez) January 2, 2018

Heard same on Olson. Will be interesting to see if Rich Gannon joins Gruden's staff. Washburn also would be candidate for potential Jim Schwartz staff. https://t.co/4QmVAgtzQM

— Adam Caplan (@caplannfl) January 2, 2018

Olson has played a significant role in helping develop Jared Goff into a franchise quarterback. This season, Goff had 28 touchdown passes and just seven interceptions, elevating his play after a tough rookie season.

Olson was on Gruden’s staff in 2008 as the Buccaneers’ quarterbacks coach. He stuck around for three more seasons as Tampa Bay’s offensive coordinator under Raheem Morris, but it was hardly a successful stint.

The Buccaneers never finished better than 19th in yards or 20th in points scored, winning 17 games in those three seasons. Olson has bounced around since then, spending time with the Raiders and Jaguars from 2013-16 before joining the Rams this season.

Who do we feed the ball to after TGII...

The last time I was this excited for the week after 1 Jan was 2004 (no brainer). That being said, I have to wonder what is going through McVay's 25 lb. brain right now, while drawing up an attack that will be balanced and attack ATL's weaknesses. First I'm going to state the obvious, then I'm going to pretend that I am McVay...

- Todd Gurley: will get his touches, period, and it needs to be the focus. If ATL shuts down the run for the most part, get TGII into the flats and pass him the damn ball! One way or another, he needs 20-25 touches.

- Gerald Everett: if I'm McVay, this game would be his coming out party. In part, because I'm not so sure he will be game planned for much, and also because he is a freakish athlete that gets YAC. I was actually really pumped when we selected him with our first pick in the draft, and then I was even more pumped when I realized that we got the TE McVay wanted and didn't loss out on Cooper Kupp!

Now I know that we have a lot of mouths to feed, which is such a welcome problem for us. SOOOO, I'm not forgetting about Woods, Kupp, Watkins and to a lesser extend, Higbee. But what I'm saying is, target Everett on some 1st and 2nd downs with some clever play design to get him in space or get the mismatch we want. If I'm McVay, I'm going to show you why I took him with our first overall pick.

*Note* I'm not McVay, so Everett probably only gets targeted 2-3 times this game, and we win by 10 points! Either way, I could not be more excited to watch our RAMS this Saturday evening!

Cheers!

The Most Unstoppable Player in Football Is About to Make His Playoff Debut

https://www.theringer.com/nfl/2018/1/4/16847914/aaron-donald-rams-nfc-playoffs-defensive-player-year

The Most Unstoppable Player in Football Is About to Make His Playoff Debut
Aaron Donald boasts the perfect combination of talent and instinct, long making him a matchup nightmare. Scarier yet? He’s never been better than he has this season for a Rams team that’s peaking at the perfect time.
By Robert Mays

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Getty Images/Ringer illustration

Talking to Wade Phillips can feel like cracking open a book on the best defensive players in football history. The Rams coordinator has coached in the NFL for 40 years, and he’s been fortunate enough to tutor some legends. Phillips will drop names like Bruce Smith and Reggie White into casual conversation the way most people would mention their buddy Frank. After spending one season overseeing the defense in Los Angeles, Phillips feels comfortable adding Aaron Donald to his list of greats.

In late December, Phillips said he didn’t think Donald’s 2017 accolades should be limited to the Defensive Player of the Year. As the fourth-year defensive tackle collected 11 sacks for one of the league’s best defenses, Phillips grew more ambitious. “I was thinking more like Most Valuable Player in the league,” Phillips told reporters on December 21.

A week later, standing outside the media room at the Rams’ facility in Thousand Oaks, California, Phillips admits that he was selling Donald’s MVP case to make a point. But he also contends that there’s a real point to be made. “I think [Donald] is the most dominant defensive player,” Phillips says. When it’s suggested that Donald is playing his position at a higher level than anyone in football, Phillips doesn’t hesitate. “Yeah,” he says, “that’s definitely true.”

As a defensive tackle, Donald faces a daunting road to winning Defensive Player of the Year honors, let alone MVP. The Buccaneers’ Warren Sapp was the last full-time interior defensive lineman to take home the DPOY trophy, and that happened 18 years ago. In Donald’s lifetime, an interior lineman has won the award only three times.

For defenders who reside in the muck between the tackles, the statistical production required to capture individual hardware can be hard to accrue. Donald is tied for 11th in the NFL in sacks, but dig deeper and his numbers are there. His 91 pressures are 21 more than any other interior lineman in the league, according to Pro Football Focus, and eight more than the closest edge player—Von Miller. Down after down,

Donald has emerged as the most devastating defender in football, and he’s a prime reason the 11-5 Rams enter Saturday’s wild-card matchup against the Falcons as the turnaround story of the season and a legitimate Super Bowl threat.

As of late, he’s taken things one step farther: It’s time to start seriously considering Aaron Donald as the best player in the NFL.

The show that Donald put on at the 2014 scouting combine did more than just shape his reputation as one of the most gifted athletes to ever grace the field. It became the stuff of football folklore. “What did Aaron run in the 40 at the combine?” Ravens All-Pro guard Marshal Yanda asks. “It was crazy. At like 300 pounds, he ran like a 4.6. He’s super fast, he’s super twitchy. And he also did like over 30 reps of 225 [pounds in the bench press].”

Yanda’s recollection isn’t far off. Donald, who weighed in at 285 pounds, tore off a 4.68-second 40-yard dash, one of the best times ever recorded by a defensive tackle. He tossed up 35 reps on the bench press, placing him in the 92nd percentile at his position, and ranked among the 96th percentile in both the broad jump and three-cone drill. Donald’s display was the sort of performance that comes along once in a generation.

Many NFL athletes have physiques resembling Marvel sketches, but Donald stands out even among that crowd. Defensive tackles simply aren’t built like him. Donald looks like the Incredible Hulk, only shrunken to 6-foot-1. His traps jut off his shoulders in a manner that’s almost cartoonish. He has no body fat to be found.

“I think some guards in there try to roughhouse him, but nobody’s gonna do that in this league,” Rams defensive line coach Bill Johnson says. “I can tell you that right now. I’ve been in this league 18, 19 years, and from a physical standpoint, he’s got it all.”

Donald’s unique profile provides the basis for his success. Yet despite recording eye-popping production at the University of Pittsburgh (28.5 tackles for loss as a senior) and delivering an all-time showing at the combine, Donald fell to the 13th pick in the 2014 draft largely because of concerns about his height. “Marginal height and frame is nearly maxed out,” Donald’s NFL.com draft profile read. “... Overpowered in the run game and ground up by double teams. Gets snared and controlled by bigger, longer blockers.”

The irony is that NFL offensive linemen hate Donald’s stature. “I don’t like shorter guys because they have natural leverage,” Yanda says. He compares Donald to Geno Atkins, the Bengals standout Yanda faces twice per season. “[Donald’s height] creates issues,” veteran Giants guard John Greco says. “Because right off the bat, he’s lower than you. When he creates that momentum and that leverage, it’s a nightmare to stop.”

Against most defensive tackles, a guard will devise a plan to take away one specific pass-rushing approach. With a lot of interior players, that involves hunkering down to stop power moves and forcing 300-pounders to beat them with speed. That isn’t an option for those lining up against Donald.

By anchoring immediately at the snap to prevent him from building a head of steam, guards leave themselves vulnerable to speed moves on the outside. “You don’t expect it, especially from a three-technique [tackle], that he would have the speed to go around the edge and make you whiff on your punch,” Rams guard Rodger Saffold says.

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The problem with treating Donald like any other quick-twitch tackle is that even at 285 pounds, he’s powerful enough to knock a guard right on his ass. “Most speed guys like him, you’re going to want to set off the ball and not worry about the bull rush,” Yanda says, referring to the way he typically likes to create separation from quicker defenders at the snap. “Well, if you set off the ball and he catches you in a bull rush, you’re goin’ backwards.”

Donald presents opponents with a true dilemma, forcing them to choose between two equally horrible options. Rams guard Jamon Brown has played with Donald for three seasons. Over time, he’s concluded that the best route to slowing him is to close any initial distance at the snap. “He’s got one of the best get-offs, I feel, in the game right now,” Brown says. “My thought process is, if I get on him early, I have a better chance to recover or recoup later in the down.”

Yanda has faced Donald only once, during the Ravens’ 16-13 win against the Rams in the 2015 season. From his experience, it’s best to account for Donald’s initial burst because of how quickly it can torpedo a given play. “I’m definitely going to set for the speed just because the speed is usually what gets the sack the fastest,” Yanda says. “The bull rush, you can kind of die a slow death and at least have a chance.”

Every guard interviewed for this story offered his own pet theory for how to handle Donald, but the truth is that none felt confident in their approach. Donald’s physical skill set is such that there is no right way to contain him. “You’re basically going to stop one thing, and if he does the other thing, you’re going to get beat,” Yanda says. “That’s something you’re gonna try to avoid, but it’s the cost of doing business with guys like that.”

For as rare as Donald’s athletic traits are, there are other defensive tackles who are at least in his orbit in that regard. Greco compares Buccaneers star Gerald McCoy’s burst off the line to Donald’s. He mentions Eagles tackle Fletcher Cox as another guy who can be devastating when given space to get moving.

In his nearly two decades coaching NFL linemen, Johnson has seen plenty of physically gifted and ultra-talented players. What he hasn’t seen is a guy who combines otherworldly talent with an uncanny feel for causing chaos like Donald. “A lot of people have got speed and power,” Johnson says. “[Aaron] has also got this instinct, whatever it is. If I knew exactly what it was, I’d be writing books.”

The way that Donald can make adjustments mid-play often sabotages any preliminary plan a guard or team has to stop him. What Brown and Saffold have come to fear most about Donald, after hundreds of reps going against him in practice, is neither his speed nor power. It’s how he can change his approach based on their initial movements.

Any step, lean, or shift can provide an opening that leads to destruction or embarrassment. “He can feel your weight so well,” Saffold says, alluding to Donald’s sense for knowing which direction a lineman wants him to go. “He’s able to make those counters off any type of lean to make you fall flat on your face.”

Saffold says the counter move he dreads most is the bull pull. What starts out as a bull rush quickly transitions to a speed move that involves Donald yanking a lineman forward and swimming over the top. The swim—a quick flip of the wrist over a guard’s shoulder—can go to either side, depending on the angle that the offensive lineman is facing.

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Brown admits that the bull pull is devastating, but finds it less intimidating than the small stutter step Donald regularly tries before his bull rush. The goal of that stutter is to gauge how a guard will react to Donald threatening to go both inside and outside on a single snap, a possibility that gets to the essence of what makes him virtually unstoppable.

Donald may start a given play on the outside shoulder of a guard, but there’s no guarantee he’ll stay in that gap, even if it’s his assignment. “With NFL situational football you’re thinking, ‘OK, this guy has to be rushing this gap,’” Greco says. “That’s not the case [with Donald]. He’s going to take the path of least resistance to the quarterback.”

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Donald’s lateral quickness allows him to jump from one gap to another on a single play, but it’s the less obvious elements of his movement that truly speak to his greatness. To account for Donald as a pass rusher, offenses like to send the center in his direction. The goal in these cases is for the guard to funnel Donald to his help on the inside.

But that approach can go sideways when Donald is soquick to dart inside that neither the guard nor the center is in position to clip enough of Donald to stop him. Knowing exactly when to strike inside negates the value of double-teams altogether.

“When I talk to people about Aaron,” Brown says, “I tell them that he’s the best reactionary animal I’ve ever gone against. Meaning sometimes, when he goes inside, it’s not necessarily something that you did. It’s something that he sees. Once he takes that inside and he makes his mind up, that’s when it’s the hardest to stop him.”

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How Donald developed that feel, only he knows. Phillips says that he’ll see Donald studying opponents alone in the team facility at night, like Bruce Smith used to do. “I don’t think he wants it out,” Phillips says, “but he does [that].” Johnson says that Donald prepares “quietly and individually,” and leaves it at that. The method with which Donald goes from mere film study to a perfect understanding of how to attack every block is anyone’s guess.

In a sense, Donald’s unpredictability on the field can make him a coaching challenge. “You wouldn’t let anyone else do that,” Johnson says of Donald’s freelancing tendencies. He points to a game-sealing sack from the Rams’ 41-39 win against the 49ers in Week 3, one of those classic plays that involved Donald hopping from one gap into the other, as evidence.

At the snap, Donald goes after right guard Brandon Fusco’s outside edge with a quick club-and-rip move. The moment that Fusco leans to his right to slow him, though, Donald swings his left arm over the guard’s hands, bursts inside, and drags quarterback Brian Hoyer down in the backfield.

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By now, Phillips has enough experience around transcendent players that he doesn’t get in the way of tactics like that. “It’s easy for me,” Phillips says. “That’s the way I coach. You ask [players] to do certain things, but when they do something different and make the play, it’s an ‘atta boy.’ If you take that away from the great ones, you’re going to limit them.”

Make no mistake: Phillips believes Donald is on track to becoming one of the greats. The arrival of Phillips and head coach Sean McVay in L.A. before the 2017 season has elevated the Rams franchise, and with that, Donald has ascended to even greater heights. “He’s got a zest for wanting to win, and [the Rams] haven’t won,” Phillips says. “I think it’s perked him up a bit.”

Saturday’s wild-card game against the Falcons will be Donald’s first playoff appearance, and it comes against an offensive line missing injured guard Andy Levitre. As Atlanta—and the rest of the NFC—prepares to deal with the most unstoppable force in football, there’s only so much advice that a fellow blocker can give. “It’s just a rough day,” Saffold says of facing Donald. “You’ve got to just get out there and hang on for dear life.”

PFT's Wild Card Picks

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/01/04/pfts-wild-card-picks-7/

PFT’s wild card picks
Posted by Mike Foolio on January 4, 2018

Falcons at Rams

MDS’s take: The Rams have been perhaps the most fun team in the league this year, with exciting young players on offense and defense, not to mention an exciting young coach. It’s a shame that they still haven’t really caught on in Los Angeles, but maybe a playoff win will do the trick. They should win this game handily, as they’re a better team than the Falcons on offense, defense and special teams.

MDS’s pick: Rams 32, Falcons 21.

Foolio’s take: The Rams are believed to have wanted to slide to No. 4 on the playoff tree, so that they’d face the Panthers instead of the Falcons this weekend. It didn’t work out that way. The Rams may be the best team playing this weekend, but they also may be the home team most vulnerable to losing. If the Falcons can hold a fourth-quarter lead.

Normally I don't comment on these types of threads but Foolio has outdone himself here and deserves a rebuke. Who but you, Mike, believed the Rams wanted to slide to the #4 seed? What a stupid thing to assume. In this case when you assume, you make an ass only out of you.

Btw since when is "the best team playing this weekend" also the most vulnerable to lose? Dumbass!


Florio’s pick: Falcons 27, Rams 23.
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Titans at Chiefs

MDS’s take: The Chiefs went through an ugly mid-season swoon, but by and large they were a good team this year. The Titans, on the other hand, got into the playoffs more because the AFC was weak than because they were really the kind of team we think of as playoff-caliber. On Saturday in Kansas City, I have a hard time seeing Tennessee pulling off an upset.

MDS’s pick: Chiefs 28, Titans 14.

Florio’s take: The Chiefs have rediscovered their offense. The Titans in many ways are still trying to find theirs. Arrowhead Stadium provides a home-field advantage that should deliver more wins than it does; it will help deliver one on Saturday.

Florio’s pick: Chiefs 27, Titans 17.
-------------
Bills at Jaguars

MDS’s take: The Bills and Jaguars were the only two teams in the league that didn’t pass the ball more than they ran it in 2017. (Buffalo had 487 runs and 476 passes, Jacksonville had 527 runs and 527 passes.) So I expect a run-heavy ballgame, probably low scoring and possibly determined by a defensive or special teams touchdown. The Jaguars’ defense should be able to hold the Bills in check, especially with LeSean McCoy injured, and Jacksonville should take this one.

MDS’s pick: Jaguars 16, Bills 7.

Florio’s take: If the “good” Jaguars show up, this should be a laugher. If the “bad” Jaguars arrive at EverBank Field, the Bills could be securing a third game against the Patriots. But Jacksonville has one thing Buffalo doesn’t — Tom Coughlin. And Coughlin will make sure that everyone knows what it takes to have success in January.

Florio’s pick: Jaguars 24, Bills 14.
----------
Panthers at Saints

MDS’s take: This should be the weekend’s best game. Cam Newton has been up-and-down this year, but I have a feeling he’s going to be up for his first postseason game since Super Bowl 50. However, I love the potential of the Saints’ offense to put up a lot of points on the Panthers’ defense, and I’ll pick New Orleans to pull out a close win at home.

MDS’s pick: Saints 31, Panthers 27.

Florio’s take: The cliché that it’s hard to beat a team three times in the same year doesn’t really apply as strongly as many believe. It definitely doesn’t apply to this current rivalry, where the Saints know how to build and hold leads against a Carolina team that is one of the best in the conference, but not good enough to win in the Superdome.

Florio’s pick: Saints 30, Panthers 21.

Todd Gurley's MVP push makes him Player of the Month for December

https://www.thescore.com/nfl/news/1460550


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Wesley Hitt / Getty Images Sport / Getty
AFC

Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le'Veon Bell racked up 310 rushing yards, 259 receiving yards, and six total touchdowns through his four December games (he didn't play in Week 17). He joins Jerome Bettis as the only Steelers to be named Offensive Player of the Month multiple times.

Buffalo Bills safety Jordan Poyer joins teammate Micah Hyde to become the only Bills teammates to capture Defensive Player of the Month honors in the same season. Hyde received the award in October.

Harrison Butker of the Kansas City Chiefs was named December's Special Teams Player of the Month after going 15-for-18 from field-goal range through five games. He successfully converted all 14 of his extra-point attempts. He's the first rookie kicker to win multiples of the award since they started being handed out in 1986.

NFC
Todd Gurley becomes the first Rams offensive player other than Marshall Faulk to be named Player of the Month more than once in a season. Gurley averaged 5.87 yards per carry on 75 December attempts, adding 309 receiving yards and scoring eight total touchdowns. Faulk accomplished the feat in both 2000 and 2001.

Arizona Cardinals linebacker Chandler Jones racked up 19 combined tackles in five games to become the NFC's Defensive Player of the Month. He recorded five sacks, bringing his 2017 total to 11.

Robbie Gould picks up NFC Special Teams Player of the Month honors for a third time in his career, tying him for the most among active kickers. The 35-year-old made all 18 field-goal attempts and all 12 extra-point tries. His 66 points through the five games are just 13 shy of the 79 points he accounted for in the 49ers' first 11 games of the season.

Rookies
Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt experienced a late-season resurgence, finishing his rookie year with at least one touchdown in each of his final four games. He went 35 yards for a score on his lone carry of Week 17 before being taken out.

New Orleans Saints cornerback Marshon Lattimore is the first rookie defensive back to win Player of the Month multiple times since the award's inception in 1996. He recorded an interception in three of his final four games of the regular season.

MMQB: Who Will Win Super Bowl LII? Our NFL Playoff Predictions

https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/01/04/super-bowl-52-lii-playoff-predictions

Who Will Win Super Bowl LII? Our NFL Playoff Predictions
By PETER KING AND THE MMQB STAFF

According to our staff, home-field advantage will play a role in Super Bowl 52. The Vikings are the heavy favorite in the NFC, picked to win the conference by 10 of our 11 prognosticators. (There was little confidence in the NFC’s top seed, the Nick Foles-led Eagles, who were pegged as one-and-done by all but one voter.)

As for the AFC champ, it was a near-even split between the top two seeds. Ultimately, Minnesota, with the opportunity to play as a (likely) home underdog on February 4, ended up tied with the Patriots as the leading vote-getter to win it all.

AFC CHAMPION: Steelers (6 votes), Patriots (5)

NFC CHAMPION: Vikings (10), Saints (1)

SUPER BOWL LII CHAMPION: Vikings (4), Patriots (4), Steelers (3)

PETER KING

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Vikings 27, Patriots 23: Finally, it happens. Home-field won’t matter as much in this historic Super Bowl as will the best single unit in the 12-team playoffs: Minnesota’s defense. Imagine Case Keenum, the Vikes’ third option at quarterback entering the season, beating Tom Brady in a Super Bowl, and beating him in the Vikings’ backyard. Man, what a strange trip this season has been.

JENNY VRENTAS

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Steelers 20, Vikings 16: Five of the last six times the Patriots had the top seed in the AFC they made it to the Super Bowl. But this year’s Steelers team, specifically the defense, is better than the one that lost in last year’s AFC championship game in Foxborough.

The Super Bowl will be a throwback matchup highlighted by two excellent defenses, but the Steelers, with the more talented overall roster, come out with the win. Afterward, Ben Roethlisberger retires.

ROBERT KLEMKO

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Steelers 31, Saints 28: As good as this Saints defense has been of late—holding their last six opponents to fewer than 300 yards passing and three of their last four opponents to less than 100 rushing—I don’t think there’s a team in football capable of containing Ben Roethlisberger, Martavis Bryant, Le’Veon Bell and JuJu Smith-Schuster when healthy and clicking. New Orleans’ best hope would be DE Cameron Jordan, who would be going up against Steelers RT Marcus Gilbert (who has quietly had a tremendous season).

ANDY BENOIT

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Patriots 24, Vikings 20: The game’s best quarterback (and best player), Tom Brady, against the league’s best defense. That’s as good as it gets.

JONATHAN JONES

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Patriots 31, Vikings 16: We may get our first clunker of a Super Bowl since the 48th edition. The Patriots are far and away the best team, and as impressive as Minnesota’s defense is, they don’t have the offense to win a title. Tom Brady is going to win his sixth Super Bowl and become even more immortal when he and Bill Belichick become the first team to win a Super Bowl in the opponent’s house.

TIM ROHAN

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Vikings 24, Steelers 21: The Vikings ride their No. 1-ranked defense through the NFC, take advantage of Carson Wentz’s absence and become the first team in NFL history to play in the Super Bowl as the home team. On the AFC side, Ben Roethlisberger and Co. finally get revenge on Tom Brady and the Pats. But in the Super Bowl, the Vikings defense makes the difference, especially playing at home. The 2017 season ends with Case Keenum being carried off on his teammates’ shoulders.

CONOR ORR

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Patriots 35, Vikings 13: The Vikings become the first team in NFL history to make the Super Bowl in their home stadium, which gives sportswriters a week of free content—a minor escape from writing the 241st feature on The Patriot Way. But once kickoff is underway, it’s clear Bill Belichick has knowledge of the future.

MARK MRAVIC

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Steelers 31, Vikings 19: I had Steelers-Eagles as my midseason pick, but with Philly terribly weakened now the Vikes will ride home field to the Super Bowl. The Case Keenum magic will end at home against a Steelers attack that will have all their weapons back.

ANDREW BRANDT

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Vikings 27, Steelers 20: I usually favor explosive offenses but this is the year of the Vikings and their fabulous defense. They are fast, physical and extremely well-coached. And they have enough offense, with Stefon Diggs and Adam Thielen, to win. The fact that they are playing the Super Bowl at home is gravy; this is the year of the Vikings.

KALYN KAHLER

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Vikings 21, Steelers 14: Minnesota becomes the first team to play a Super Bowl on home turf, and playing in the shadow of US Bank’s giant gjallarhorn is just the home field advantage they need to edge the Steelers. Ben Roethlisberger leads a two-minute drill, and completes what looks to be an eight-yard touchdown to Jesse James with two seconds left to tie the game.

The ball is jostled as he hits the ground after he extends his arms over the goal line. The play is reviewed, and it is determined the catch did not survive the ground. On the bright side for Pittsburgh, this play is the momentum that finally changes the catch rule’s application at the goal line.

GARY GRAMLING

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Patriots 27, Vikings 26: I’d just like to point out I was predicting Patriots over Vikings in the Super Bowl before it was cool. (Just ignore all that stuff about Derek Carr MVP.)

Goff Needs to Focus more on Woods than Kupp

...in the playoffs. Let me say that I love Kupp, and think he was a steal in the draft in the 3rd round. He does pretty good in big games, but also has had some critical drops and fumbles that hurt us in big games. Thinking of the first Hawk game and the Vikings in particular.

Woods is pretty much money when targeted and I have never gotten the sense that any moment is too big for him. Not saying to eliminate Kupp from the game plan, just look towards Robert first...

Superbowl teams seeding since 1975

I like stats and I was wondering what seeds usually get to the SB. I found this infographic that goes from 1975 to 2014 :

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The most recent years have been :
2014 - 1 (DEN) - 1 (SEA)*
2015 - 1 (NE)* - 1 (SEA)
2016 - 1 (DEN)* - 1 (CAR)
2017 - 1 (NE)* - 2 (ATL)

Needless to say, it is statistically rare to see teams that are not in the #1 or #2 seeds get to the SB and has not happened since 2012 when the AFC #4 seed, the Ravens, won it all. Since then, only 1 team that was not a #1 seed got there and it was last years Falcons.

Those Rams have defied all expectations though, so we can hope they keep going !

Downtown Rams 2017 NFL Awards

Downtown Rams 2017 NFL Awards
January 4, 2018
| By:Downtown Rams Staff
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The 2017 regular season is over so we figured it would be best to vote on the NFL season awards and release the results. In this voting, we had nine panel members, five votes per category and we tallied up the votes based on the votes. For instance, a first-place vote would receive the maximum total of five points, followed by second place receiving four points, third place receiving three points, fourth place receiving two and fifth place receiving one. We hope you enjoy and feel free to leave any comments, questions or concerns below!

Most Valuable Player
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Our panel had an almost unanimous first place vote for Todd Gurley. Gurley wins our MVP award and is the first Ram to do it since Kurt Warner in 2001.

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Offensive Player of the Year
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Again? Yes. Our panel rewarded Gurley after he arguably was the most dominant player in the NFL this season.

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Defensive Player of the Year
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Rams dominating the awards on a Rams centric site? Yes, but regardless these players are warranted. Aaron Donald finished with more QB pressures than anyone in the league in only 14 games played.

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Offensive Rookie of the Year
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Alvin Kamara was unanimous in first place voting. In a season in which Kareem Hunt took the NFL by storm to start, Kamara stole the spotlight to finish.

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Defensive Rookie of the Year
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The New Orleans Saints take the cake with both rookie awards. Marshon Lattimore capped off an incredible regular season in which he helped change the Saints defense that had held them back for years.

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Coach of the Year
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There are some great candidates but it's impossible to ignore the obvious Coach of the Year, Sean McVay. Forget about the age, even though being 31-years old and coaching in the NFL is cool and all. McVay turned the worst offense into the best, a bottom feeder in the NFC West to the best and of course a 4-12 debacle into an 11-5 work of art. Regardless what happens moving forward, McVay has earned this award by doing things we simply haven't seen in the modern era.

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Comeback Player of the Year
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Keenan Allen missed a chunk of 2015 after lacerating his kidney, in 2016 he missed the entire year with a torn ACL in week one but in 2017 Allen came back in a big way going over 1,300 yards receiving on over 100 receptions and six touchdowns. It's no wonder why he got the nod with this award.

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Most Disappointing Player of the Year
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It's unfortunate but Derek Carr came into this season the richest player in NFL history after signing a record-breaking contract right before the season. The aftermath of this season? A coach fired, a once exciting team now out of the playoffs and once considered a franchise QB now considered the biggest disappointment of 2017. It doesn't help that the Raiders season ended on the play above. With injuries last year and this year Carr was unable to will the Raiders to the playoffs, but there's always next year right?

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The Downtown Rams Panel (9)

Jake Ellenbogen (@JKBogenDTR):
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Blaine Grisak (@bxgrisakNFL):
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Alex Kelly (@Nation_Rams)
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Gary Weed (@ksudodger)
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James Lamar (@Lamar_Football)
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Nicolas Galarreta (@Rams24_7)
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Joe Branham "Sheriff Joe Bags" (@SheriffJoeBags)
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Joseph Isola (@JISO57)
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Mark Lujan (@MLujan520)
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Hope you enjoyed. Please let us know your thoughts on our list and share with us your list!

The Rams did something quite remarkable vs Titans....

.....that has gone unnoticed by everyone. And I hope this gives everyone more confidence moving forward. I call this my 'cheap score' factor.

When an NFL team gets a score from their defense (fumble recovery/run for TD or a pick 6) unless the other team gets one, or at least a TD from their special teams, the team getting that defensive score wins something like 95% or more of the time. I found this information some time ago and lost it, I am still looking for it- just to support my statement.

However, in the Titans game after the Rams gave up that fumble recovery scoop and score, they just came back and won. When I was watching that, I was hoping we would get that 'cheap score' back as that is the easiest way to get even.....but when we won without it I got really pumped for the playoffs!

The likelihood of this being just coincidence (Rams winning without a 'cheap score') is VERY small...it is more likely that the Rams are MUCH MUCH better than the Titans. By that I mean that it is an indicator that the Rams are a 'Very' Elite team, in fact better than their record indicates.

JMHO....
I will continue to look for this statistic and post back when I find it.

Go Rams!!

Local Radio Rams Coverage??

This should be the most exciting time of the year if you’re an LA Rams fan. First playoff game in about 3 days. So much to discuss relating to the Rams, their opponent, strategy, injuries and so on. So I have an hour drive every morning from 8-9AM. This morning at 8AM I flipped on the radio at 710AM “Rams Radio Home” and it was nonstop Lakers talk. The Lakers. An 11-22 Lakers team. Look I love the Lakers but it’s a horrible season yet again for them and it’s not even mid-season yet. They had LZ, George and the annoying Laker insider Ramona Shelburne. She literally says the word “like” 50 times a minute-no joke. I had to switch stations. I couldn’t listen to those fools anymore. They completely ignored any talk of the Rams biggest game in almost 15 years. I flipped stations and kept coming back to check but there was nothing. Maybe I just turned the station on at the wrong hour?? But come on maybe just a 5-10 minute segment on the playoff game on Saturday would have been nice-but no dice. Also that hater Keyshawn Johnson was no where to be found.

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