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NFL Black Monday Primer: Coaching hiring/firing discussion

https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/12/28/nfl-coaches-black-monday-firings-hirings

NFL Black Monday Primer: Which Coaches Will Be Fired, and Who Will Fill The Vacancies
By ALBERT BREER

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GETTY IMAGES (2)

Sixteen years later, Amy Trask still vividly remembers the moment she found out that the Jon Gruden Raiders-to-Buccaneers trade had been consummated.

Trask was the Oakland CEO at the time. And she was not pleased.

“My husband and I were coming in the house, it was 9, 9:30 at night,” Trask recalls now. “And the phone was ringing, my arms were full of things, and I remember picking up the phone and it’s Al (Davis). And I’m juggling things in my arms, and I’m so distracted and he says, ‘blah, blah, blah, trade.’ And I said to him, ‘Look, I’m gonna again ask you—please rethink this, I don’t think we should do this.’

“And his exact words were, ‘I don’t think you heard me. I just told you, I just did it.’”

That night, in early 2002, the Raiders sent Gruden to the Bucs for first-round and second-round picks in that April’s draft, a first-rounder in 2003 and a second-rounder in 2004. The Raiders wound up with corner Philip Buchanon, tackle Langston Walker, defensive end Taylor Brayton and center Jake Grove. Oakland made the Super Bowl that next season under Bill Callahan.

The Bucs, behind Gruden, beat the Raiders for the Lombardi. And because of that, history will tell you that Trask was right to tell Davis not to trade the coach, despite the tremendous haul coming back. So the question I had for Trask next was simple: Was there a point where she’d have signed off on dealing Gruden, something she’d been steadfastly against?

“Maybe,” she said. “I doubt it, but maybe.”

The coaching carousel is about to start spinning again, and we’re about to take you through all the rumors. But everything needs to be prefaced with the fact that, in this year’s market, supply is lagging behind demand. There have been 50 coaching changes in the past seven cycles, more than seven per year, and that’s dried out the pipeline. And with 8-10 openings expected this year, some teams may try to get creative.

So maybe the time has come to reprise the idea of coaches being traded. Texans coach Bill O’Brien is the most obvious candidate to be moved. But the idea of Browns coach Hue Jackson and Jets coach Todd Bowles going back to their old homes in Cincinnati and Arizona has been kicked around in league circles all fall, and those guys are under contract too. The wheels certainly are turning.

A trade is not the only way teams could think outside the box to find the right guy in January. Some might dip their toe in the college pool (Stanford’s David Shaw will get calls), others may look to position coaches (Philadelphia QB coach John DeFilippo) or special teams coaches (Kansas City’s Dave Toub), if they’re not satisfied with the class or can’t get one of its belles.

But we start with all the teams that could be active on Black Monday, and I’ll break this into three categories for everyone. Let’s go …

LIKELY/DONE

Chicago Bears: The writing has been on the wall here for a while. The expectation is that John Fox will be gone. What’s less certain is whether or not general manager Ryan Pace gets to pick the next coach, and whether or not the coaches pursued by the Bears dictate Pace’s fate.

Cincinnati Bengals: Marvin Lewis’ impending departure has been on the table from the moment he and the team decided not to do another one-year Band-Aid extension, which sent him into a contract year. Word is, the Bengals will lean towards coaches they know, which is why Jackson and Jay Gruden’s names have been mentioned, as have internal candidates Paul Guenther and Darrin Simmons.

Detroit Lions: With the Lions eliminated, I moved this one from the “maybe” pile, as rumblings have held for a few weeks that Jim Caldwell would be in trouble if he missed the playoffs. I’d expect Patriots defensive coordinator Matt Patricia to be a consideration if Caldwell gets whacked, with the possibility that Jim Bob Cooter and the offensive staff stay.

Indianapolis Colts: Chuck Pagano kept his team competitive, and the front office respects the job he and staff have done. That said, GM Chris Ballard is almost certain to fire Pagano and hire his own guy. The attractiveness of the job Ballard will offer is, of course, tied to Andrew Luck’s health. Two of his ex-Chief co-workers, Toub and offensive coordinator Matt Nagy, have been connected to this one, and there are whispers that Indy could make a run at Pats offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels.

New York Giants: Much will depend on who the team hires as general manager, and many believe that Dave Gettleman will be involved in the remaking of the scouting operation, be it as the hire or in another senior role. While the attention has been on McDaniels, and a McDaniels/Nick Caserio package deal has been rumored to be a consideration, I’d expect both Patriot coordinators to be considered.

WE’LL SEE

• Arizona Cardinals:
Many have assumed that Bruce Arians will retire after this year. Is he having second thoughts? The Cardinals went through this last year—Sean McVay was atop their candidate list then—and are ready either way now. As we mentioned, the Jets could get a call on Bowles, and O’Brien might draw interest here too.

Denver Broncos: John Elway is not pleased with how the season’s gone, and the expectation is there will at least be changes to the offensive side of the staff. A bad loss at home to the Patrick Mahomes-led Chiefs could put Vance Joseph in peril. This one remains unpredictable.

Oakland Raiders: Jack Del Rio is under contract through 2020, and so a big question here is whether or not Mark Davis would be willing to eat three years on a contract. Assuming he’ll give Del Rio another year, there are problems on the staff that we’ll detail a little later in the column that should lead to a significant shakeup. Another thing to note here would be Davis’ long-standing fascination with Gruden.

• Tampa Bay Buccaneers: There’s been some level of expectation that Dirk Koetter will be a casualty of the Bucs’ hugely disappointing 2017 season, and we’ve seen several on-field signs (most recently, with Jameis Winston’s display last Sunday) that he’s lost some level of control over the team. You know where this goes next: All eyes on Gruden. And if they can’t get Gruden, does Koetter get a stay of execution?

• Tennessee Titans: If the Titans beat the Jags on Sunday, they’re in the playoffs. If they lose, there could be a coaching change. And if there is one, I’d bet McDaniels is in the mix to reunite with his ex-Patriot colleague Jon Robinson.

• Washington Redskins: A change here would require eating three years of Jay Gruden’s contract, and I don’t believe Dan Snyder would be pumped to write those checks. I also believe many in the building there think Jay Gruden had a strong four years. But it’s Washington … so you can’t rule anything out.

IT’S COMPLICATED

• Cleveland Browns:
Jimmy Haslam already said Hue Jackson will be back in 2018, and GM John Dorsey affirmed it upon his hiring. What if the Bengals call? Will 0-16 change anything? My belief is Jackson sticks, but I also know Dorsey’s done his research.

• Houston Texans: Simply, a reckoning is coming here. I’d be floored if O’Brien even considered signing an extension without changes to the way the football operation is aligned, and 2018 is a contract year for him. That would create a decision point for ownership—go forward for a year with a coach that would be the No. 1 guy on the market if free, or cut the cord now and move forward with GM Rick Smith.

• New York Jets: Acting owner Chris Johnson has proven to be very level-headed, and so I’d expect the little signs of encouragement that he’s gotten from the work of GM Mike Maccagnan and Bowles this fall would carry the current group through to 2018. But if Bowles has options, like Arizona, this could get interesting.

• Seattle Seahawks: Crazy? Maybe. But with the future of several big defensive stars in question, and a possible overhaul of the roster coming, could Pete Carroll, 66, retire to southern California? It’s not the wildest idea out there.

Week 17 Picks

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2017/12/28/pfts-week-17-picks-7/

PFT’s Week 17 picks
Posted by Mike Foolio on December 28, 2017

This one was over a few weeks back, with MDS building an insurmountable lead. Last week, we disagreed on only one game. He was right, I was wrong. MDS went 13-3, I went 12-4.

To his credit, MDS isn’t resting his starters for a meaningless week of action.

We disagree on three games. For the full slate of predictions, you know what to do.

49ers at Rams

MDS’s take: The Rams don’t have much to play for, as they’re locked into either the No. 3 or No. 4 team in the NFC. The 49ers have nothing to play for, but that hasn’t stopped them from looking like one of the best teams in the league since Jimmy Grapapole became the starter.

I would have picked the 49ers even if the Rams were trying to win, but with Sean McVay confirming he’ll bench his best players, I think the 49ers should easily finish on a five-game winning streak.

MDS’s pick: 49ers 28, Rams 20.

Florio’s take: The Rams will be resting some starters, and the 49ers are trying to finish with a flourish.

Florio’s pick: 49ers 27, Rams 17.
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Redskins at Giants

MDS’s take: It’s a meaningless game, although Kirk Cousins and Eli Manning will both be motivated to have a good performance heading into a big offseason for both of them. I see Cousins’ team having the better day.

MDS’s pick: Redskins 27, Giants 20.

Florio’s take: A disappointing season ends for a pair of teams that had postseason aspirations. Now, one team will be hiring a new coach — and the other one could be doing the same.

Florio’s pick: Redskins 24, Giants 20.
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Jets at Patriots

MDS’s take: The Patriots aren’t losing to the Bryce Petty-led Jets with home-field advantage on the line.

MDS’s pick: Patriots 33, Jets 17.

Florio’s take: The Patriots know the perils of stumbling in a late-season game against a division rival. It cost them the No. 1 seed two years ago. It won’t happen again.

Florio’s pick: Patriots 27, Jets 10.
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Bears at Vikings

MDS’s take: Minnesota clinches a first-round bye in what is likely John Fox’s last game as the Bears’ coach.

MDS’s pick: Vikings 20, Bears 10.

Florio’s take: Win or lose, the Vikings seem to be locked in to the No. 2 seed. Which means that if the Eagles lose in the divisional round, the Vikings could be hosting the NFC title game.

Florio’s pick: Vikings 30, Bears 10.
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Packers at Lions

MDS’s take: Both teams are out of playoff contention, but the Lions should shut down Brett Hundley and complete the season sweep of the Packers.

MDS’s pick: Lions 21, Packers 9.

Florio’s take: A lost season for both teams; one coach likely will lose his job. There’s an outside chance that both will.

Florio’s pick: Lions 20, Packers 13.
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Texans at Colts

MDS’s take: The Texans would probably be in the playoffs if Deshaun Watson and J.J. Watt had stayed healthy. Instead they’re going to end up with a Top 5 pick — which they traded to the Browns.

MDS’s pick: Colts 20, Texans 17.

Florio’s take: Two teams that were supposed to square off for the division title are battling for the basement.

Florio’s pick: Colts 16, Texans 13.
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Browns at Steelers

MDS’s take: The Browns want to avoid 0-16, but unless the Steelers decide to rest their starters on the theory that they won’t catch the Patriots for home-field advantage, Cleveland is going winless.

MDS’s pick: Steelers 27, Browns 17.

Florio’s take: The season started with the Steelers handing Cleveland their first loss. It ends with the perfect bookend. And by “perfect,” I mean “nightmarish.”

Florio’s pick: Steelers 24, Browns 9.
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Cowboys at Eagles

MDS’s take: Neither team has anything to play for, as the Eagles have clinched home-field advantage while the Cowboys are out of contention. I think the Eagles will rest starters while the Cowboys play to win.

MDS’s pick: Cowboys 23, Eagles 20.

Florio’s take: Has a game between these two rivals ever been less meaningful?

Florio’s pick: Cowboys 20, Eagles 17.
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Raiders at Chargers

MDS’s take: After their 0-4 start, not many people thought the Chargers would still be in contention in Week 17. They need help to make the playoffs, but they’ll do their part against the Raiders.

MDS’s pick: Chargers 24, Raiders 14.

Florio’s take: The Raiders are limping to their new home away from home; how many Oakland fans will show up at Black Hole South? And will it matter?

Florio’s pick: Chargers 27, Raiders 21.
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Chiefs at Broncos

MDS’s take: The Chiefs are locked into the AFC No. 4 seed and will have nothing to play for, but if Paxton Lynch is the Broncos’ starter I just don’t see them winning even against a team taht isn’t trying.

MDS’s pick: Chiefs 20, Broncos 13.

Florio’s take: Why should anyone in Denver show up for a meaningless game? To get a glimpse of what could be the meaningful future of the quarterback position in Kansas City, via the debut of Patrick Mahomes.

Florio’s pick: Chiefs 27, Broncos 14.
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Jaguars at Titans

MDS’s take: The Titans are fighting for their playoff lives, so they’ll come in hungry and beat a Jaguars team that they may face in a playoff rematch.

MDS’s pick: Titans 28, Jaguars 24.

Florio’s take: Think the Jaguars are playing for nothing? Think again. They don’t want the Titans rolling into Jacksonville next weekend, and the best way to prevent that is to knock them out, now.

Florio’s pick: Jaguars 24, Titans 17.
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Saints at Buccaneers

MDS’s take: New Orleans should put up a big game to clinch the NFC South. This one won’t be close.

MDS’s pick: Saints 31, Buccaneers 10.

Florio’s take: The Bucs are falling apart, and the Saints are putting it all together.

Florio’s pick: Saints 30, Buccaneers 13.
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Bills at Dolphins

MDS’s take: The Bills still have a shot at the playoffs, and they should be able to pull out a win against a Dolphins team with nothing to play for.

MDS’s pick: Bills 24, Dolphins 16.

Florio’s take: The Dolphins get a chance to close out the season by spoiling Buffalo’s shot at ending an 18-year playoff drought.

Florio’s pick: Dolphins 27, Bills 20.
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Cardinals at Seahawks

MDS’s take: It’s been a disappointing season in Seattle, but they’ll finish strong against an overmatched Cardinals team.

MDS’s pick: Seahawks 30, Cardinals 20.

Florio’s take: Don’t look now, but the Seahawks may be heading for the postseason — and possibly for a rubber match against the Rams.

Florio’s pick: Seahawks 24, Cardinals 17.
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Panthers at Falcons

MDS’s take: The Falcons will sneak back in the playoffs with a close win at home.

MDS’s pick: Falcons 28, Panthers 27.

Florio’s take: The Falcons won’t have to worry about blowing a fourth-quarter lead in the playoffs after they blow a fourth-quarter lead to the Panthers on Sunday.

Florio’s pick: Panthers 30, Falcons 27.
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Bengals at Ravens

MDS’s take: Baltimore gets the win and returns to the playoffs in Marvin Lewis’s swan song.

MDS’s pick: Ravens 24, Bengals 13.

Florio’s take: The Ravens could make things very interesting in the AFC playoff field.

Florio’s pick: Ravens 27, Bengals 10.
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http://www.nola.com/saints/index.ssf/2017/12/nfl_picks_vs_spread_week_17_sa.html

49ers (-3) at Rams
Rams coach Sean McVay’s plan to rest most of his regulars caused the a 10-point swing in the line. The Rams went from 7-point favorites to 3-point underdogs. The Jimmy Garoppolo-led 49ers are favored on the road for the first time since 2014. 49ers 26, Rams 24
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http://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/12/nfl_week_17_schedule_point_spreads_betting_lines_p.html

San Francisco 49ers at Los Angeles Rams (-1.5)

Conspiracy theory: The Rams are tanking to lose the No. 3 seed, avoid Minnesota and take on the Nick Foles-led Eagles in the Divisional Round. It won't work. MY PICK: Rams.
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https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/features/writers/expert/picks/straight-up/17

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http://www.sportingnews.com/nfl/new...hers-titans-jaguars/eu3w7vcbmh2a1sl94uv6pn4z3

San Francisco 49ers (-3) at Los Angeles Rams
Sunday 4:25 p.m., Fox

The Rams could drop from the No. 3 seed to the No. 4 seed in the NFC playoffs with a loss, but Sean McVay is not concerned about it, declaring that both Jared Goff and Todd Gurley, among other key starters on both sides of the ball, will not play.

That shifts the game heavily toward red-hot, undefeated Jimmy Garoppolo, who's now dueling vs. Sean Mannion, and a much improved 49ers run defense that now gets to face Malcolm Brown instead.

PICK: 49ers win 27-20 and cover the spread.
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https://www.sbnation.com/2017/12/27...ictions-browns-0-16-patriots-steelers-vikings

SF/ LAR/ LAR/ LAR/ LAR/ SF/ SF/ LAR/ LAR
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http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2741767-chris-simms-week-17-nfl-picks

San Francisco 49ers at Los Angeles Rams

As mentioned earlier, these are two teams with little to play for in Week 17. The 49ers, though, are going to want to ride the wave of Garoppolo-mania to another win to close out the season.

That would make five straight wins for San Francisco for those keeping track.

The Rams, meanwhile, just want to get out of the game and into the postseason healthy. Head coach Sean McVay has already confirmed that Jared Goff, Todd Gurley and Aaron Donald will sit out the finale, per Marc Sessler of NFL.com. Left tackle Andrew Whitworth and center John Sullivan will rest as well.

The Rams have no interest in winning. The 49ers do. While I still expect a close, physical matchup between rivals, I'll go with the team that wants to win.

Prediction: 49ers 28, Rams 20
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http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...inner-and-final-scores-for-all-season-finales

San Francisco 49ers at Los Angeles Rams

Pick: 49ers 28, Rams 27

MVP vs OPOY

Although I think Gurley deserves the MVP, I have a feeling he will win the Offensive Player of the Year while the media gives the MVP to the Golden Boy, despite the fact that he doesn't deserve it. Remember in 1999 when Warner won the MVP and Faulk got the OPOY? (By the way, during that three-year stretch, the MVP went to Warner, Faulk, Warner - pretty impressive). How can you be the league's MVP but you're not even the best player on your team? Who knows what it means to be MVP?

Brady's 30 TDs rank him 98th on the all-time list for TDs in a season (https://www.pro-football-reference.com/leaders/pass_td_single_season.htm). I do realize that he has one game left but his TD/INT ratio (30-8) isn't much more impressive than Goff's 28-7. I read Peter King's MMQB article favoring Brady (of course) where he indicated that because the QB handles the ball on every play, they have an edge. Give me a break.

If the MVP is truly an award for the most valuable player for your team, then how can you honestly not give it to Russell Wilson? Out of Seattle's 36 offensive touchdowns, he has ran or passed for 35 of them. How can you be more valuable to your team than that? As a Rams fan who has seen his share of Seahawks games, I can assure you that without Wilson, that team is maybe 8-8. Last year New England started the season 4-1 with Garoppolo starting two games and Jacoby Brissett starting two. Their system is QB friendly and, although Brady may be the GOAT, this season he is not the MVP.

Sean Mannion

Now that I've settled in to the idea that the starters are being rested, I am excited to see what Mannion can do.
If he plays great, it puts the Rams in great position for trade value.
However on the other hand, he will have the deck stacked against him since he wont be playing with a lot of the 1's, so it may be unfair to be critical.

I think he's gonna knock it out of the park, and will beat the 49ers

Jimmy Garoppolo, Jared Goff could put 49ers-Rams rivalry back in spotlight

Jimmy Garoppolo, Jared Goff could put 49ers-Rams rivalry back in spotlight
upload_2017-12-28_10-45-46.png

Jimmy Garoppolo and the 49ers will face the Rams at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Sunday (4:25 p.m. ET, Fox). Sergio Estrada/USA TODAY Sports

Nick Wagoner & Alden Gonzalez

Long before the road to the NFC West division crown ran through Seattle, the San Francisco 49ers and Los Angeles Rams engaged in the fiercest of division rivalries.

Beginning in 1950, it was a rivalry born of heated competition and, of course, geography. Using just the time frame since the NFC West became a division in 1970, the Rams and 49ers combined to win 28 of a possible 34 division titles through 2003. Much like the Dodgers and Giants in baseball, the Rams and 49ers were expected to represent their stake in the state of California -- the Rams for the south and the Niners for the north.

With both teams struggling for large stretches after 2003, the rivalry had gone somewhat dormant, as both teams played in the obscurity that accompanies losing.

Now, with the Rams back in Los Angeles -- after having relocated to St. Louis from 1995 to 2015 -- and atop the division and the Niners looking the part of an up-and-comer, this rivalry has all the ingredients to once again be the one to watch, especially on the West Coast.

Both teams possess charismatic and confident young head coaches and quarterbacks in the Rams' Sean McVay and Jared Goff and the Niners' Kyle Shanahan and Jimmy Garoppolo. Earlier this season, the Rams and Niners played one of the most entertaining games of 2017, a 41-39 Los Angeles victory. We likely won't be treated to something similar on Sunday when the teams meet at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (4:25 p.m. ET, Fox), as the Rams rest many of their top players for the postseason.

Still, in an all-time rivalry that currently has the Niners ahead just 68-65-3, there's a realistic possibility that McVay-Shanahan and Goff-Garoppolo will be main-event caliber football for years to come.

Where they are now
Rams reporter Alden Gonzalez: The Rams have pulled a complete 180 in McVay's first season, and no player exemplifies that better than Goff. The 2016 No. 1 overall pick finished his rookie season with an 18.3 Total QBR that was easily the worst among those quarterbacks with at least 200 passing attempts. Now, at age 23, Goff has a better touchdown-to-interception ratio (4.00) than even Tom Brady (3.75). The game has slowed down for Goff, his accuracy has improved and he has a much better feel in the pocket. But he also is operating behind a better offensive line, throwing to a better group of receivers and, thanks to McVay, navigating within a much more quarterback-friendly scheme. From one season to the next, the Rams (11-4) have gone from an NFL-worst 14 points per game to an NFL-best 31 points per game. And Goff now sports the NFL's fifth-highest passer rating (100.5).

49ers reporter Nick Wagoner: Certainly, the 49ers have a lot of work to do to catch up to the newly crowned division champs. However, after an 0-9 start, the Niners have been one of the league's best teams over the past month and a half, winning five of six and currently riding a four-game win streak. At the center of that revitalization is Garoppolo, the newcomer who has single-handedly breathed life into the organization and looks every bit the part of a franchise quarterback (and stands to get paid like one soon, too). With Shanahan calling the plays and Garoppolo at the controls, the 49ers offense has surged. Combined with a fiery young defense led by foundational pieces such as defensive tackle DeForest Buckner and linebacker Reuben Foster, the Niners have a chance to finish the season as one of the league's hottest teams.

What needs to happen around them
Gonzalez: It's crazy to say, given the extreme lows of 2016, but, well, nothing. The Rams just need to keep building. Goff needs to continue to grow as a quarterback, specifically with his accuracy on deep throws and his ball security while under duress. McVay needs to continue to grow as a playcaller, most notably with his tendency to rely too heavily on the pass at times. And the front office needs to keep drafting well. The long-term concern, believe it or not, is the defense. That side of the ball was playoff-ready long before the offense, and now a lot of those key defensive players are getting expensive. The Rams might have some tough decisions to make this offseason with the likes of Trumaine Johnson, Lamarcus Joyner, Robert Quinn and Mark Barron. And they eventually need to make Aaron Donald the game's highest-paid defensive player.

Wagoner: In some ways, the 49ers would be wise to take a page from L.A.'s 2017 offseason playbook as they approach the 2018 offseason. While the Rams' dramatic turnaround is the result of many years of work, it's what the Rams did last offseason that pushed them over the top. The Niners seemingly already have the head coach and quarterback in place, but they need to make it a priority to bolster the supporting cast. On offense, that means doing something similar to what the Rams did by adding a couple of key pieces on the offensive line and at wide receiver. The 49ers' offense could use a game-breaker or two; a top wide receiver -- preferably a big, physical one -- would be a welcome addition. So too would be a couple of new bodies on the interior of the offensive line. Beyond that, the Niners also have pressing needs at cornerback and edge rusher. With more than $100 million in cap space and nine 2018 draft picks, the Niners should be able to check a number of boxes to bolster the roster and position themselves for a potential big turnaround next year.

Who they can become
Gonzalez: Kevin Demoff, the Rams' chief operating officer, recently noted that in 10 years McVay will be 41 and Goff will be 33, both still within the prime years of their respective professions. He was pointing out that the Rams have a coach and quarterback who can grow together, and he mentioned other successful coach-quarterback pairings who did the same, such as Asshole Face and Drew Brees, Mike Tomlin and Ben Roethlisberger and even Bill Walsh and Joe Montana. It helps that the Rams are very young at receiver and have a star running back in Todd Gurley who is only 23 years old. Said Demoff: "This is sustainable. And that's where, as a building block for this franchise -- for this organization, for this city -- you feel really good about what you've planted. And now it's got to grow."

upload_2017-12-28_10-44-39.png

Entering Week 17, Rams quarterback Jared Goff has a better touchdown-to-interception ratio (4.00) than Tom Brady (3.75). AP Photo/Kelvin Kuo

Wagoner: It's harder to gauge the 49ers' upside right now, because so much of that faith is being pinned on what we've seen from Garoppolo in a short, four-game stretch. That said, there's a lot to like about the way Shanahan and general manager John Lynch are building this team and this culture. Before Garoppolo arrived, Shanahan's team never fractured in the face of all that losing; and now that the Niners are enjoying some success, they don't seem to be buying into their own hype. That type of even-keeled approach is paramount -- and a direct reflection of the head coach. From what we've seen so far, if the Niners are successful in building around Garoppolo -- giving him a full offseason to learn Shanahan's offense and adding key pieces to the defense -- it's not out of the question that the 49ers could enjoy a quicker-than-imagined turnaround and become the top NFC West challenger to the Rams as soon as next season, with even bigger things just a bit further on the horizon.

What they're saying
McVay on Garoppolo: "He's definitely instilled a confidence and energy in their offense," McVay said. "I think Shanahan does a great job putting them in good situations, and he's distributing the ball to a variety of playmakers. ... He's definitely given them a spark, and they're playing really well. You even hear some of the comments that his teammates are making in terms of just the confidence that he instills based on the swagger and demeanor that he has. They've been playing really good football behind his leadership offensively."

Shanahan on the return of a rivalry: "I look at it as anybody in your division you are going to be pretty big rivals with wherever you are, and especially in the NFC West with the Rams and the Niners, it's been that way for a while," Shanahan said. "I think the hard rivals end up being usually who the better teams in the division are. I hope that we are up there as we get going; I know the Rams are there this year. ... Hopefully, that can build as we get going and we'll both be up there each year. The Niners and the Seahawks had that going for a while, and we'll see which teams start to do that now."


[www.espn.com]

  • Poll Poll
Predict The Score-- 49ers @ Rams

playoff predict the score thread?

  • yes

    Votes: 32 100.0%
  • no

    Votes: 0 0.0%

Well this is it folks..the final regular season game. I am including a poll to see if I continue to do these during the playoffs.

Same rules apply

First person who comes closest to the actual final score, including the correct winning team wins $10,000 RODollars.

Pick the EXACT final score, including the correct winning team, and win $25,000 RODollars

Several things after re-watching the Titan game...

Kinda short and sweet this week.

Goff was off on quite a few throws, but he made others that were beauties. That throw to Kupp for the TD was pure gold.

Great blocking by our OL. Higbee and all 3 WR’s, too. What a turnaround from last year.

Special kudos to Jamon Brown. Other than that 7 point brain fart, he had a helluva game. We are set at RG for the next 10 years, I think.

Higbee impressed on two catches, and his blocking is coming along nicely. Everett has his work cut out if he wants to start next year. Maybe some 2 TE sets?

“Den” was right. Ficken settled down nicely after those first 2 misses. Let’s don’t panic just yet.

I’ll say it again. Waaaaay too many blatant Titan holds not being called. WTH?

Littleton looks like a player, huh? Several clutch plays by the kid last Sunday.

Kudos to Wade’s D on a couple of red zone stops that held Titans to 2 FG’s. The difference in the game.

The lack of Ram pressure on Mariota? Two things. First, the Titans have a very good OL. Second, Wade largely had the DL playing contain to take away Mariota scrambles ala Russel Wilson. Wasn’t dramatic, but it was effective.

Ram screen game is now deadly. Geez, I wouldn’t want the job of defending Gurley. Pick your poison, huh? Goff sells it nicely, btw.

We’ve got as good a shot at making it to the SB as any NFC team on the first weekend. Yeah, the top 2 seeds with the bye have an edge. But really? Only because they have to win one less game. We needed to beat the Eagles when we had the chance, not to mention that first Seahawk game. Sigh...

UFC 219

Cris Cyborg meets Holly Holm.

I agree with Gilbert Melendez on ESPN that Holm has maybe the best chance due to how "styles make fights".

That said, I still think Cyborg wins. I also think it's gonna be a much better fight than some might think.

The rest of the card looks good, too.

TRANSCRIPTS: HC Sean McVay - 12/27

Los Angeles Rams HC Sean McVay

(Opening Remarks)

“We had practice today. We did similar to what we’ve done the last handful of Wednesdays – more of a mental day. But the guys that were the typical rest guys had we practiced – (T Andrew) Whitworth, (C John) Sullivan and (OLB Connor) Barwin, they would’ve been out with just their veteran rest days. (LB) Mark Barron with his Achilles, (G) Rodger Saffold with his oblique. (OLB) Matt Longacre, like I said, we’re going to put him on IR. That transaction hasn’t gone through with his back. Then (WR) Cooper Kupp was a nonparticipant with a knee.”

(On if Longacre is going need surgery)

“He’s going to get surgery this week. It’s a similar-type injury. There’s a couple little differences, (Director/Sports Medicine and Performance) Reggie (Scott) would be able to articulate it better than I would. But it’s something where he’s been playing through a lot of pain. It’s been a gutsy effort for him and wanted to see if giving him that last week off would’ve maybe quieted it down a little bit and enabled him to hopefully be able to go for the playoffs and stuff like that. But it’s something that – with the doctor’s suggestions, needed to get that thing fixed and do what’s best for Matt.”

(On what goes into the decision making process of resting his starters for the 49ersgame on Sunday)

“When you get in – we gave the players and coaching staff off on Monday, so then we came in as a staff. We talked amongst our coaching staff and really, our Head Athletic Trainer Reggie Scott and our Head Strength and Conditioning Coach Ted Rath. We took everybody’s kind of opinions into account – what we feel like is best for the team. Certainly, you use the resources like a (Defensive Coordinator) Wade Phillips, who’s had some experiences that he can draw on. We had something similar like this in Washington when I was there a few years back. That was kind of when we made that decision and then we communicated to the player’s kind of what our plan is. But for us, everything that we do is intentional and designed to try to be best for our team and for our players, I think they understand that. I know sometimes people might not always agree, but when situations like this come up, we talk about it’s a nice luxury to be able to have, but you want to make sure that you handle it the right way for our team. It might not be for every team, but we feel like that’s the best approach for us.”

(On how WR Sammy Watkins role evolved in his offense this season)

“I think Sammy’s just continuing to get more and more comfortable with all the things that we’ve done. I think if you just watch Sammy down-in and down-out, the way that he’s running his routes, the way that he’s competing in the run game. And then when he does get his targets, the way that he aggressively attacks the ball and is able to finish a lot of plays. Referenced by a handful of plays like the one that he caught the other day where he’s caught a couple of those slants. He’s leading our team in touchdown receptions this year – that was his eighth touchdown. He’s done a lot of really good things. Obviously, you know what the rare speed that he’s got and he’s got great, aggressive hands to track the ball down the field as well. You see the play he makes in New York. You look at the play that he was able to make when we played San Francisco the first time. He’s a guy that a lot of times too will dictate coverage, where he ends up having some guys travel with him, or he’ll maybe have some safety play over the top and that opens up some things around him. He’s been a great player for us and just been really pleased with Sammy.”

(On Watkins’ ability to block downfield from the receiver position)

“I think it’s rare. When you see a player of his caliber and I think Sammy is a great example of kind of what we see from our group as a whole, but just watching, he’s such a physical player with and without the ball in his hands. I think that helps him set things up throughout the course of the game, but it also demonstrates the selfless attitude that he’s displayed throughout the course of the year. Being able to make some of those key blocks that have sprung some of the long runs you see from our running backs – (RB) Todd (Gurley II) in particular. You look at, even going back to the Giants game, he ends up taking two guys on the backside of (WR) Robert Woods third-down and 33 conversion that he had on the screen. So those things might go unnoticed publically, but we certainly appreciate and notice those in our building and I know that all his teammates feel the same way. Sammy’s been great.”

(On if he’s decided if QB Jared Goff and Gurley will be among the starters that he will rest on Sunday)

“Yeah. They’ll be two of the guys that won’t play this week.”

(On if Whitworth and Sullivan will not play Sunday)

“Yes. They won’t play either.”

(On if he starts preparing now for the potential playoff matchup following Week 17)

“I don’t necessarily know that we do that, but we did talk about focusing on our process – just getting better every single day. For a couple guys, it might entail helping some of those other guys that will get an opportunity to play a little bit more than what they’re accustomed to. But also focusing on getting themselves healthy and focus on some of the fundamentals and the techniques within the frameworks of just what they can do individually regardless of whoever that opponent is. But we’ve talked about that as a team today. It’s clearly been communicated kind of what our plan is going into this game and how that will effect and alter the way that a guy goes about his week. We certainly will get ready for this game the right way. We want to see our guys that are going to get an opportunity to compete, do a great job and you see the Niners coming in here with a lot of really good momentum. They’re playing really well on all three phases and it’s going to be a great challenge. I think it will be a unique opportunity that presents itself for some of those players that maybe we don’t see as much, step up and get opportunities that they typically haven’t been accustomed to, but I think it will serve us really well as a team”

(On if DT Aaron Donald will start on Sunday)

“Aaron won’t play.”

(On the players having incentives in their contracts and what the process is handling those incentives)

“That’s one of the things that you definitely are exposed to in terms of handling things the right way where you figure out how to make good on some of those things if they might be a couple yards away or if they have something being 16 games active then that’s a coaches’ decision. That’s something that because of (Rams Owner/Chairman) Mr. Kroenke then you look at (Rams General Manager) Les (Snead) and (Rams Chief Operating Officer & Executive Vice President of Football Operations) Kevin (Demoff) and (Rams Senior Assistant) Tony Pastoors – those will be things that you’re definitely mindful of that you get exposed to for the first time. Certainly you want to make good on those things where you don’t want them to not reach their incentives because of a coaches’ decision to hold you and get you healthy for the playoffs. We definitely are mindful and aware of those guys that were affected and want to make sure that we take care of that and handle that in a first class way and that’s exactly what we’ll do.”

(On Gurley being a part of the passing game and what did he envision from him when he was building this offense in his mind)

“I think it’s kind of evolved at the season has progressed. The one thing that you can say about Todd just from day one, not really knowing anything about him, other than just the special talent that you see on tape is he’s come in with the right attitude of just getting better every single day. He’s one of those players that kind of represents the way that you work day-in and day-out and then how that practice preparation leads to the game reality. But, he’s really worked and been intentional about getting better as a receiver. I think he can catch the ball outside of his frame. That’s a difficult catch he makes on the shallow cross. Last week, catching it behind his body – when you’re going across the field, that’s a hard catch for receivers to make let alone a running back who typically isn’t accustom to playing outside the core. I think he’s got a great feel in the screen game. When you look at some of the things that just marry up with what we’re doing offensively. It’s ended up kind of being a good fit. I think our offense has evolved just based on we’ve got a lot of great players and you as coach and we as a coaching staff always want to try to evolve and adapt to them, because that’s what’s most important and I think that’s something that’s kind of just going as the year has progressed. But when you see the way that Todd has played specially these last couple weeks, it’s been impressive and it’s been instrumental in us being able to win the division.”

(On incorporating giving space to Gurley to gain reception yards in the offensive scheme when he’s having trouble on the ground)

“Todd’s always a player that you want to try and find different ways to get him involved in the game whether that be through the pass game or through the run game. When the ball’s in his hands good things happen. A lot of what we do is also predicated on what the defense presents. When you’ve got a quarterback like we do that can recognize and read different things and get us in and out some of the right looks based on whatever it is that we’re trying to get done. A lot of those plays the other day, we’ve got a couple different plays called in the huddle, when you see us running some things and Jared ends up getting us to the appropriate play that leads to a positive look and then the players are executing at a high level. Todd’s a guy we’ll always try to find ways to get him involved. We talk about being able to maintain a certain level of run-pass balance, but if a team is fully committed to kind of stacking the box and playing with that extra defender that we can’t account for, then you want to try to make sure that you get him the ball and space to the pass game. But he’s always going to be a guy that, when the ball’s in his hand just when you look at good things are happening and we’ll continue to do that.”

(On if Goff will be the backup quarterback on Sunday)

“Yes, just because we’ve got two guys. (QB) Sean (Mannion) will start, but Jared will be active and he’ll be the backup. He’ll be up on game day, but those other guys that we talked about – they’ll be inactives.”

(On if WR Cooper Kupp hurt his knee in the Titans game)

“It was something that he’s kind of been playing through. He aggravated it a little bit more. He had had just the normal bumps and bruises, but that knee had kind of gotten banged around a little bit. He’s making a bunch of different plays and he’s competing in the run game. It was aggravated on that play, but it had been bothering him before that as well.”

(On how different does QB Jimmy Garoppolo make the 49ers from the first time he played them)

“I think when you look at the first time that we played them. I thought (QB) Brian Hoyer played a really good game, did a great job getting in and out the huddle. They changed some tempos up, made some big plays down the field. You look at some of the things (WR) Pierre (Garçon) was able to do, I thought they ran the ball well. I think when you just look at what Jimmy’s done since he’s been playing these last couple weeks – he definitely instilled a confidence and energy on their offense. I think (49ers Head Coach) Kyle (Shanahan) does a great job putting them in good situations and he’s distributing the ball to a variety of playmakers. You look at last week, they’re 10-for-15 against Jacksonville on third downs. They’re finding ways to make plays through the play action game. They’re changing the launch point with some of those run actions that are married with the play-action, where they’re changing the launch point as far as a bootleg or some of those where you’re actually setting up in the pocket. I think the skillset where he can kind of speed up his delivery at the top, he keeps his eyes down the field. Some of the off schedule plays he’s made in red zone have been really impressive. He’s definitely given them a spark. They’re playing really well. You even hear some of the comments that his teammates are making in terms of just the confidence that he instills based on swagger and demeanor that he has. They’ve been playing really good football behind his leadership offensively.”

QB Jared Goff
(On if he is okay with sitting out this Sunday)

“Yeah. I agree with the decision on our coaching staff’s part to get some guys rest and get some guys healthy. Yeah, I think it’s good to get myself back to feeling really good and feeling fresh.”

(On if he’s worn down mentality or physically and if this comes at a good time)

“Yeah, I feel like I was kind of just saying – I feel good. I don’t feel banged up or anything, but a week off can never hurt, especially this late in the year. You count the four preseason games and then 16 games, or I guess for us 15, so yeah it can wear on you. But no, I feel good. I think ultimately this is going to help guys that really take a beating. I’ve been kept pretty clean most of the year and guys like (RB) Todd (Gurley II), guys on the defense, guys that really take that beating, the guys up front, it will really help them, I think.”

(On his connection with WR Sammy Watkins and what’s happened on the slant patterns)

“Yeah. He’s got really strong hands. He’s a really strong player, really strong hands and he runs those routes really well. That’s one of the main things that he’s really, really good at so we try to get in those situations as much as we can. We’ve bene pretty consistent with him up to this point and we want to keep going that way, but I know when he gets a step on somebody, if I put it anywhere close to him he’s going to make that catch.”

(On how QB Sean Mannion is developing as a quarterback)

“Well, he’s done a great job helping me this year so far. That’s one thing that I can say, is how appreciative I am of him and everything he’s done, all the work he’s put in to not only help himself, but help me weekly and help me on the sidelines weekly in the games. I’m excited to see him go out there, I know we all are. See him get a chance to really show what he can do an we’re all excited to see it.”

(On how the role is different being a backup)

“Yeah, I’ll do my best to try to help him on the sidelines and tell him what I see. For the most part there isn’t much I can help him with, but there’s little things – I played the Niners earlier this year, there’s little tidbits that I can give him here or there. But, ultimately I think he’s just excited to be out there and I’m excited to see him play.”

(On if he envisioned Gurley making the leap in production from last year to this year)

“Yeah, for sure. You know what he’s done and his past and it’s no different than anyone else on the team. Last year was tough for damn near everybody on the team, we were bad as a whole team and most individuals didn’t do what we were supposed to. I think this offseason, I was able to see what Todd was doing working out and all the work he put in and it was truly impressive. So no, it wasn’t a surprise. It’s not a surprise to see what he’s done up to this point this year, it’s really not. He’s playing at a high level right now, but it’s nothing I don’t think that’s not sustainable for him. I think he’s a great player and expect him to continue to get better and his work ethic will carry him.”

(On if Gurley’s performance had anything to do with the offense around him)

“I don’t know. All I can speak to is what I saw him do this offseason, which was like I said, truly impressive. All the work he put in – as good of a player he is, he’s a better teammate and harder worker and it’s good to see.”

(On the difference between the community from last year to this year)

“People seem to like us a bit more nowadays (laughs). It’s nice winning. They say winning fixes everything and certainly we’ve won quite a bit this year, so we have built that fan base a little bit and have built the kind of family feel in the Coliseum now. We know every Sunday that we’ll have our faithful fans out there and it’s really good to see some of the same people that were with us last year that have been able to do this ride with us and get to see them enjoy that. It’s been a good back and forth with the fans this year for sure.”

(On if the team feels like they can compete with anyone and if that has to do with their confidence level in sitting certain players in this game)

“I think that’s definitely part of it. I think the confidence we have in each other and the confidence the coaches have in us, and in fact yeah, we do feel like we stack up with anybody in the league and we feel like we can beat anybody, so that is sure part of it. But, I think more than anything it is getting healthy, getting fresh and understanding that we are locked in to a first round home game and that’s all we can worry about right now.”

(On if he’s anxious to see who they’ll play in the first round Wild Card and if he will be scoreboard watching during the game)

“No, I’ll be dialed in. We don’t want this to be misconstrued at all – we’re trying to go out and win this weekend. I don’t think it matters who we’re putting out there, I think (Head Coach) Sean (McVay) will echo this as well, we’re trying to go out there and win the game. It’s not a preseason game, it’s not anything to be taken lightly. So no, I’ll be dialed and trying to help Sean (Mannion) the best I can and hopefully he can go out there and lead us to a ‘W.’”

(On how he thinks QB Jimmy Garoppolo changes the dynamic of the 49ers organization)

“Yeah, he’s done a good job. I think we’ve seen a little bit of their film in the last three or four weeks. So yeah, he’s done a good job and it’s good to see. It looks like he’s settling in and I know he’s won four in a row and just beat Jacksonville who is a good team. So yeah, they’re tough and he’s a good player. I know our defense is getting ready to play.”

(On if he felt like the team was a few pieces away from completing the puzzle last year)

“Again, you talk about last year so much in this room. It’s been good seeing the culture and everything that’s changed, but we’ve really had a good time this year learning and getting better and really haven’t focused much on the year prior. It’s been a whole new culture and a whole new staff and a whole new feeling in the building, a new energy and up to this point this year we’ve been successful. Our first goal is knocked off with the division and now we’re looking to bigger and better.”

Rams place Marqui Christian on IR

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2017/12/27/rams-place-marqui-christian-on-ir/

Rams place Marqui Christian on IR
Posted by Charean Williams on December 27, 2017

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Getty Images

The Rams placed safety Marqui Christian on injured reserve. Christian injured his shoulder on special teams Sunday.

He played in 12 games this season, getting 47 defensive snaps and 257 special teams snaps.

Los Angeles promoted offensive lineman Aaron Neary and outside linebacker Garrett Sickels from the practice squad.

The Rams claimed Neary off waivers from the Eagles on September 3. They waived him September 16 and signed him to their practice squad three days later. Neary has never played in a regular-season game.

He also has spent time with the Eagles and Broncos.

Sickels signed with the Rams’ practice squad October 12. He also spent time with Cleveland and Indianapolis.

The Rams also announced they signed tight end Henry Krieger-Cobble and cornerback Taurean Nixon to the practice squad.

Hue Jackson prepared to jump in a lake

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...son-prepared-to-fulfill-promise-jump-in-lake/

Hue Jackson prepared to fulfill promise, jump in lake
Posted by Darin Gantt on December 27, 2017

Hue Jackson promised that the Browns wouldn’t go 1-15 again this year, and that if they did he’d jump into Lake Erie.

So while he has a loophole (they may go 0-16), he is prepared to make good on his pledge, and dive into the frigid waters.

Via Mary Kay Cabot of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Jackson opened his press conference Wednesday in a good mood.

So how many people are jumping in the lake with me?” Jackson said. “Obviously I’ve got to get wet. I get it. I can pick a day and get everyone out there, we’ll all be in swimsuits and trunks and snorkels and all that.”

Jackson said he’d follow through to benefit his foundation, which works to end human trafficking.

“That’s going to be at my convenience, and hopefully I can get a lot of people to come out,” he said. “It’d be something that we’re going to make special. I don’t like it, don’t like to do it for the reason why I’m having to do it, but I have to make do on my word. I just think that’s what you do. I do get that. I made a statement, I gotta back it up. That’s the type of person I am, so that’s what we have to do.”

The fact some good might come out of the gesture is the only good news about it, since he’s carrying a 1-30 record into this week’s game. He insisted he’s confident he’s going to get a chance to improve that record next year, which some might think as good of an idea as giving yourself hypothermia.

Game plan for Sunday

What do you think McVay has up his sleeve for the Niners? I listened to his interview and, while he did say he'd rest some players, he didn't say he was sitting them all. I still think he wants to get 1) the win, 2) Gurley the rushing title and MVP and 3) the scoring title.

I think we'll see Gurley and Goff for at least the first half with heavy dose of the run (with Gurley and Brown) mixed in with a few screens. Those are safe plays for Goff that will keep the clock running, shorten the game and keep Garoppolo off the field. There might be some quick passes sprinkled in but I wouldn't expect any deep balls that are going to force Jared to hold the ball too long. McVay learned from the Eagles game what can happen there. We'll probably be without Barron, Ogletree, maybe Whitworth and anyone else who is ailing. The second half will probably belong to Malcolm Brown and I'm sure he'll get his share of totes in the first half. What do you think he has in store?

Peter King: MMQB - 12/27/17

PK was uncharacteristically late for his annual butt-smooching of all things Patriots, but here it is better late than never.

He decided that his creepy man-crush Tom Brady should be the MVP, not Todd Gurley. No surprise there. At least the man is consistent. Btw when Brady retires watch for PK's obsession to switch over to Jimmy Garoppolo. :sneaky:

He does gives some love to Wade Phillips further on down in the column though. So there's that.

These are excerpts to read the whole article click the link below.
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https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/12/26/p...l-playoff-picture-instant-replay-week-16-mmqb

Merry Christmas, NFC: The No. 1 Seed Eagles Suddenly Look Very Beatable
Peter King

ON THE MVP

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WESLEY HITT/GETTY IMAGES

I appreciate the greatness of Todd Gurley and the value of Todd Gurley. But he’s not the Most Valuable of the NFL in 2017. This is a 17-week, 16-game award. Games in October and November mean almost the same as games in December—unless a candidate carries his team to a division title or a playoff berth on his shoulders and is the overarching dominant factor in his team’s rise to power. Gurley, in the past two weeks, has been beyond superb, with 456 yards from scrimmage and six touchdowns in huge wins at Seattle and Tennessee.

Gurley leads the NFL in scrimmage yards and has a lead of 13 yards over Le’Veon Bell and 14 over Kareem Hunt in the NFL rushing race with a game to play. On his team: the NFL’s fifth-rated quarterback, Jared Goff, and a strong candidate for defensive player of the year, tackle Aaron Donald. So Gurley has had significant help.

In the season’s middle eight games, in the two months beginning Oct. 8, Gurley totaled 906 rushing/receiving yards and four touchdowns, and the Rams went 6-2. Very nice numbers. Not stunning numbers.

The MVP would most often be a quarterback anyway, because he touches the ball on every offensive snap and theoretically is every team’s most significant player, for better or worse. I believe other players can and should win it; I voted for Adrian Peterson in 2012.

But this year, with a week to play, the MVP on my ballot is Tom Brady. :palm:

Playing without his top target (Julian Edelman), playing while his team’s defense was being fixed on the fly, playing while taking a consistent beating, and playing at age 40 (that doesn’t matter, but it’s a part of his story), Brady has struggled some in December (four TDs, five interceptions).

But he’s still 3-1 this month. And in the Patriots’ 9-2 start, his TD-to-pick ratio was 26-to-3. I think Gurley has been an eye-opening phenom on the Rams’ recent run to a surprising division title. He’s a great player. Brady’s a more valuable player to his team, and in the league.

The AP asks for 50 voters in the media to vote for one candidate. But if we voted 1-2-3, here’s the way I’d have the field with one week to play:

Brady.
Russell Wilson.
Gurley.

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* * *

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MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES

ON THE EAGLES

Philadelphia clinched home-field advantage in the NFC last night with some sort of Christmas miracle, the 19-10 high-wire win over Oakland. But it’s hard to think of a win that felt more like a loss for Philadelphia than this game. I haven’t seen the kind of inept offensive play I saw in this game since, well, since the Texans earlier on Monday. Or since the Giants on Sunday.

Suffice to say, the Eagles are in big trouble. This is relatively impossible to fathom, but Philadelphia gained 37 yards in the second half and outscored the Raiders by nine points. This is because Oakland, in eight possessions in the last 20 minutes of the game, went interception-fumble-punt-missed field goal-fumble-punt-interception-fumble. I didn’t think it was likely for Jack Del Rio to get fired this winter … until about 11 p.m. Eastern Monday.

I can imagine all the Eagles in the locker room post-game. A win’s a win. And We clinched home-field in the NFC—there’s 15 other teams that wish they could say that. And We’ve got all the confidence in the world in Nick Foles. They’re deluding themselves. Even with home-field advantage through the playoffs, the Eagles are going to have to make some plays on offense against three very good teams.

Can they make enough positive plays on offense to win even one of those games against a team with the defensive talent of New Orleans or Carolina, one of which is the likely divisional-round foe on Jan. 13 or 14; or then in a possible championship match against the Rams or Vikings; or then in the Super Bowl? Hard to imagine.

You don’t want to overstate the importance of one game. But Foles threw far better sideways than any other way Monday, and he piloted one drive of more than 14 yards in his last nine possessions against a team with a porous secondary in a major swoon entering the game. He was inaccurate, continued to have trouble finding top receiver Alshon Jeffery (two targets, zero catches) and inspired zero hope that when the games matter he’ll be able to flip some switch and respond like a playoff quarterback should.

Foles now has a five-point win over the moribund Giants and an all-time lucky win over the disorganized (that’s putting it nicely) Raiders. The next game he has that means something is nearly three weeks away. The Eagles’ staff has a lot of work to do to find some way that Foles can perform competently to win a playoff game.

* * *

ON WEEK 17

I hate boring Week 17s. We haven’t had a truly lousy one in years, since I don’t know when. But this is how uneventful Week 17 is shaping up to be:

• The NFL thought so little of the drama in Week 17 that it canceled the Sunday night football game on NBC. Wise move. A relatively meaningless game on New Year’s Eve, with the chance it could be truly meaningless by the time it kicked off depending on the outcome of the earlier games? No thanks.

• Seven of the eight divisions in the NFL have a champion this morning. The only one that doesn’t, the NFC South, will be won by either New Orleans or Carolina … with the second-place team in the division the fifth seed in the NFC.

• The AFC has the fifth and sixth seeds open. If Baltimore wins over Cincinnati, or the Bills or Titans lose, the Ravens cop the fifth seed. That’s likely. Amazingly, as bad as the Titans have played, they’re the sixth seed with a win over Jacksonville or losses by the Bills and Chargers. The Chargers and Bills are long shots for that sixth seed.

• The most interest development, to me, is the battle for the third and fourth seeds in the NFC. The Rams have a tough game against the surging Niners on Sunday; Jimmy Garoppolo has won four in a row since taking the starting quarterback job. If I were Sean McVay, I wouldn’t play that game like the seventh game of the World Series.

I’d rather be the fourth seed in the NFC than third. A divisional weekend game at likely second seed Minnesota shapes up to be a tougher game than at top seed Philadelphia, based on what we’ve seen in two weeks of Nick Foles in relief of the injured Carson Wentz. It’ll be interesting to see how the Rams play that game.

* * *

Quote of the Week

“Officials up here, they always find a way to get it right for the Patriots. That's not the reason why we lost, but it sure would have helped out in the game.”
—Bills running back LeSean McCoy, after the controversial (to put it mildly) overturned Kelvin Benjamin touchdown marred Buffalo’s loss to New England.

* * *

THE AWARD SECTION

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THEARON W. HENDERSON/GETTY IMAGES

OFFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

DeAndre Hopkins, wide receiver, Houston. I know. Two catches, 41 yards in a dispiriting 34-6 loss to Pittsburgh. But there has not been a more difficult catch in the NFL this season than the 3-yard touchdown catch Hopkins made in the lost cause of a game Monday evening in Houston. It’s hard to describe it, except to say he reached around with one arm and batted the ball so he could catch it one-handed with the other, all the while fighting off a Steelers defender.

Hopkins had just started making beautiful music with Deshaun Watson when Watson went down with a torn ACL in late October. (In their last game together, at Seattle, Hopkins had eight catches for 224 yards.) The reason I’m likely to make Hopkins one of my two All-Pro wide receivers when I submit my Associated PressAll-Pro and season awards ballot six days from now is that, even without Watson, Hopkins has had 748 receiving yards and six touchdowns in eight games, with Tom Savage and T.J. Yates at quarterback. Imagine being on pace for a 1,496-yard season with Savage and Yates as your quarterbacks.

Jimmy Garoppolo, quarterback, San Francisco. The 49ers have been seeking a franchise quarterback since concussions forced Steve Young to retire in 2000. For the bargain-basement price of a second-round draft choice (which gets later in the round every week), they’ve almost certainly found him. In a month, Garoppolo—unless he’s a Hollywood matinee idol mirage—has become the long-lost solution.

Signs were everywhere in the 44-33 stunner over Jacksonville’s strong defense, led by the 10-play, 79-yard, easy-as-pie drive to open the game. Garoppolo’s six scoring drives out of 10 possessions (not counting the halftime kneeldown), including three late ones when the Jags made it a game, showed his command of an offense that’s still new to him.

Think of it: Garoppolo was traded eight weeks ago today, and if you watched on Sunday, you’d have thought he’d been in the Kyle Shanahan offense for four years. It wasn’t the 21-of-30, 242-yard, two-touchdown, one-pick, 102.4-rating performance that was eye-opening, or the 44 points on a top-five defense. It was the command, the grasp of the offense, the confidence.

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Todd Gurley, running back, Los Angeles Rams. Catapulting into the MVP discussion in the past two weeks with six touchdowns in two dominant performances, Gurley again led the Rams to an impressive victory—this time to help the team win its first division title since 2003. In the 27-23 win over the Titans in Nashville, Gurley had 35 touches for 276 yards and two touchdowns—118 rushing yards and 158 in the air—and leaped tall defenders in a single bound. Twice.

Gurley combines the power that Jeff Fisher cultivated with the athleticism and make-’em-miss ability that Sean McVay has wisely used. I didn’t think any 2017 player could be a better all-around back than Le’Veon Bell, but Gurley has certainly looked like it in this commanding run of greatness.

DEFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Cam Jordan, defensive end, New Orleans. Dominant player in the NFC South’s biggest game of the year. In putting the Falcons behind a major 8-ball to make playoffs, Jordan had two sacks of Matt Ryan and two additional knockdowns, and helped on a huge second-half goal-line stand that was the trademark of the Saints’ defensive day.

Marquis Flowers, linebacker, New England. Acquired in what was a fairly invisible trade with the Bengals for a seventh-round pick in late August for linebacker depth, Flowers came up huge in a game against Buffalo that was closer than the score (37-16) indicated. He had a team-high 10 tackles and a career-high 2.5 sacks to help the Patriots expose the weaknesses of Tyrod Taylor’s protection and ability.

SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Byron Jones, defensive back/gunner, Dallas. There has been no better downed punt in the NFL this year than the one by Jones to kill a Cowboy punt at the Seattle 1-yard line. Jones dove, his body parallel to the ground, and with the ball near the goal line flipped it back onto the field of play, where it was downed. Meanwhile, as if he’d been practicing this move since he was 3, Jones somersaulted in the end zone and popped up, barely celebrating The Punt-Downing of the Year in the NFL. Well, I’m celebrating it.

COACH OF THE WEEK

Wade Phillips, defensive coordinator, Los Angeles Rams. The amazing run of an amazing 70-year-old coach continues. With the Rams on the way to the playoffs for the first time since 2004, Phillips now has compiled a ridiculous streak of success. No one hits the ground running like Phillips.

In his first season on the staffs of the 1989 Broncos, the 1995 Bills, the 2002 Falcons, the 2004 Chargers, the 2007 Cowboys, the 2011 Texans, the 2015 Broncos and the 2017 Rams, those teams made the playoffs. Even though this Rams defense has bent, it hasn't broken, and the fact that they’re 11-4 and have clinched the division with a week to play … well, Phillips has turned out to be a smart hire (a fairly obvious one, but smart nonetheless) by egoless Rams coach Sean McVay.

GOAT OF THE WEEK

Al Riveron, executive vice president of officiating, NFL. Riveron has a very tough job. He has to be fair to 32 teams, and he has to call ’em the way he sees ’em, now that the NFL has chosen to make replay a centralized process, looping in Riveron and the officiating command center to examine replays with the referee on the field. The Kelvin Benjamin reversal, as I detail above, shows that the process has gone way too far.

The NFL first instituted replay use in 1986—there have been several iterations since—to correct obviously wrong calls. The call on the field should be reversed by Riveron and the on-field official only when the evidence to do so is incontrovertible—and there is no way to tell with certainty on the Benjamin reversal that the call is obviously wrong.

* * *

Things I Think I Think

1. I think these are my quick thoughts on Week 16:

a. I urge you this week to watch for my MMQB story with Frank Gore, who enters the last game of his 13th NFL season Sunday against Houston 139 yards shy of his 10th season of 1,000 or more rushing yards. This is not just about the football life of Gore.

It’s about the work ethic and the lessons he’s learned along the way, such as this advice to future football players who will run in NFL backfields: “Love the game. Love the game. Perfect your craft, every day. Look at all the guys who everyone says, ‘He’s the best one.’ And be better than they are.”

b. Truly, Gore is one of the players I’ve covered who I admire the most. Read what he’s learned this week at The MMQB.

c. Frank Gore: fifth on the all-time rushing list, 74 yards from 14,000. Of the 11 top rushers of all time, he’s the only one not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame … and the only one not eligible for the Hall yet.

d. I suppose as the curtain draws on Dez Bryant’s eighth NFL season, it’s too late to say, Grow up, Dez. He’s 29 years old. Against Seattle, he was pouty about not getting the ball, and when he finally caught a Dak Prescott pass, he fumbled it away to the Seahawks. If Dallas is going to retool after this season, I’d seriously consider starting with this head case.

e. Cam Newton is one mysterious football player. I look up in the fourth quarter of a game the Panthers needed, Sunday against the 4-10 Bucs, and 57 minutes into it, Jameis Winston is out-passing Newton 367 yards to 108.

f. And then Newton plays Superman on the last drive and wins the game, after fumbling the snap, bulling into the end zone for the decisive score. He pulled that rabbit out of his hat.

g. Regarding Adam Schefter’s report that UCLA’s Josh Rosen would prefer to go to the Giants instead of the Browns: Uh, is there a quarterback with options who wants to play for the Browns?

h. Regarding Adam Schefter’s report that there are teams that believe Aaron Rodgers should be declared a free agent by the league because the Packers abused injured-reserve rules: Riiiiiiiiiiiiiight.

i. It’s maddening to watch Matthew Stafford play quarterback.

j. I saw some people question the future of Dak Prescott after the loss to Seattle. Man, I know about five teams who wish that somehow, some way, the Cowboys would go in a different direction at quarterback. Prescott would have a ton of suitors.

k. Every time I watch the Bills, I’m more impressed with middle linebacker Preston Brown. He is a great sideline-to-sideline player.

l. This is how a losing team plays: Tampa kicker Patrick Murray, four-for-four in field goals, pushes wide a 51-yard field goal with three minutes left. Bucs 19, Panthers 15.

m. This is how a losing team plays: Panthers still down four to the Bucs, 45 seconds left, fourth-and-three, Panthers’ ball on the Tampa 5, no timeouts left for Carolina … and Tampa Bay’s Chris Baker jumps offside. The 2.5-yard penalty gave the Panthers a half-yard to make to extend the drive, instead of three yards, and Carolina converted.

n. This is how a losing team plays: Bucs held Panthers below 260 total yards in both meetings this year. Lost both.

o. Larry Fitzgerald’s Christmas Day column for The MMQB is the kind of gem that will likely make the John McCain family cry.

p. Don’t want to make too much of that egg-laying by the Jags, but giving up 44 to the Niners two weeks before a playoff game was worrisome enough. The near-brawl between teammates Malik Jackson and Aaron Colvin was just as worrisome.

q. Hmmmm. Jerry Jones called the Dallas loss “an extreme, extreme disappointment.” Beware the ides of January when Jones is disappointed.

2. I think I agree with Mike Florio on this one: The NFL needs to launch an independent investigation into the misdeeds at NFL Network, as detailed by a lawsuit by a former network wardrobe stylist, and by the story from a former makeup artist there, as told to The MMQB’s Tim Rohan. As makeup artist Erin McParland wrote, wardrobe chief Jami Cantor told her to be careful around some of the cretins at the network, saying: “You’re new. You’re pretty. You’ll be targeted.” What a horrible way to live life, to be afraid some idiots will hit on you at work every day.


3. I think I am so pleased that Lisa Olson of The Athletic wrote about the #MeToo experiences of some female sports journalists in an excellent column. I am also pleased Olson is still writing about sports, and bringing up the seamy side as well as the sunny. I covered the incident 27 years ago when Olson was harassed in the Patriots’ locker room by three players.

It is branded on my brain how the owner of the team at the time, Victor Kiam, said the Boston Herald, which assigned Olson to cover the Patriots at the time, was “asking for trouble” by assigning a woman to cover the team—and Kiam said he didn’t disagree with the abuse the players heaped on Olson. Lord, what a horrible environment the Patriots were then.

4. I think sports, and the sports media, have made progress in the treatment of women who cover and are a part of the games. Just not enough.

5. I think I can’t imagine a better part-owner of the Carolina Panthers than Steph Curry. He loves the Panthers, he loves the Carolinas, he loves football. When Jerry Richardson sells the team (I am assuming Bank of America is going to have a key role in putting a collection of wealthy and super-wealthy owner candidates together), I hope Curry is involved. Here’s what he told Rachel Nichols of ESPN about it: “I’m serious. I’m really serious about it. I think it’s such a such a unique opportunity to impact my hometown.”

6. I think this is totally crazy to say, but the Browns could go 1-31 over Hue Jackson’s first two seasons, and I would stand staunchly behind the decision to bring him back for year three.

7. I think there will be time to fete James Harrison, one of the best and certainly one of the most interesting players of this era, released by the Steelers the other day at 39. I am not convinced he’s played his last snap. But Harrison must not be forgotten, and if he doesn’t play again, we need to celebrate one of the iconoclasts of the past 20 years.

8. I think if I were John Mara and Steve Tisch, I’d ask my coaching staff why Davis Webb cannot get on the field in the height of meaningless games when:

• The Giants are 0-11 in NFC games this year, the worst mark in team history, and have been out of contention since pre-Halloween.
• The Giants have lost 13 games for the first time in the storied history of the franchise, with one meaningless game left.
• The Giants were shut out at Arizona and were pulse-less on offense.

I have stressed this over and over when discussing the Giants in recent weeks. Ben McAdoo was absolutely right in saying he wanted to play different quarterbacks for the last five games, because there was nothing to be gained for the future of the franchise by continuing to run out Eli Manning for the final five meaningless games. McAdoo, in fact, was the adult in the room in aiming to get Davis Webb two or three late-season starts.

But the public and media outcry was so shrill that the franchise wilted under the public pressure, and now the organization will enter the offseason having no idea if Webb, the third-round rookie, can walk and chew gum at the same time. A pathetic display by the Giants. You know what they say about coaches and GMs and people in football who listen to the fans too much? If you listen to the fans too much, soon you’ll be sitting with them.

9. I think one of the things I like about my life now is I’m able to work with great people to bring you stories like these, about Deshaun Watson and his commitment to live his life, in part, for things other than football. My thanks to a superb support system at NBC Sports, in particular producer David Picker, that makes stories like this possible.

And also, I should say thanks to the Watson family, for agreeing to tell a story that is often uncomfortable for them because of the personal nature of it. When my children were young, they were sports fans, and I wanted to be sure that if they rooted for specific players, these players were good people as well, because I didn’t want them to be disappointed one day if their heroes did something crummy. After working with Watson and his family, I feel good about saying: Parents, you can buy your kids Deshaun Watson jerseys.

Rams to rest Goff, Gurley, Donald, Whitworth, Sullivan and others against 49ers

Sean McVay: Rams to rest some starters in Week 17
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Kevin Patra
Around the NFL writerFor the few teams heading into Week 17 already locked into playoff position, the lingering question is whether to rest starters for the playoffs or play for a win heading into the tournament.

Two organizations are providing examples of each approach. Jacksonville coach Doug Marrone said the Jags will play to win Sunday against Tennessee. Los Angeles Rams coach Sean McVay is taking the opposite method, indicating he intends to rest some players in Week 17 versus the San Francisco 49ers.

The Rams already clinched the NFC West. At best they can be the No. 3 seed, at worst the No. 4 -- there is an argument that the lower seed might have a more desirable path through the NFC this season. At each spot, L.A. would host a playoff game on the Wild Card Weekend.





"Being locked into that third or fourth seed -- every single game is important -- but I think it will provide an opportunity for us to potentially get some guys healthier, rest them, give some other guys a chance to step up," McVay said Tuesday, via the team's official website. "How that affects the guys that are healthy that we want to be smart with is going to be determined as the week progresses. But it is one of those deals where I think you might see us rest some guys and use this week where, you don't ever take anything for granted, but knowing that you do have a home playoff game regardless of how things play out, this might provide an opportunity for us to get some guys healthy."

McVay added: "That's a luxury that we want to take advantage of. And everything that we do is what we think is best for our football team."

Players nursing injuries like Alec Ogletree and Mark Barron are obvious candidates to sit. The question is which healthy athletes will rest up for a January run.

Todd Gurley is sprinting toward an MVP bid after becoming the third player in NFL history with 2,000-plus scrimmage yards, 10-plus rush touchdowns and 6-plus receiving touchdowns in a season, joining Marshall Faulk and O.J. Simpson. The power back would seem like an obvious candidate to take at least most of the game off to avoid injury. Will Gurley lobby for carries to keep his narrow lead as the NFL's top rusher and try to oust Tom Brady for league MVP?

McVay indicated that decisions on one player -- left tackle Andrew Whitworth, for example -- could have a ripple effect on decisions made about how much playing time others receive Sunday.

"You've still got 53 guys on your active roster, how do you get to those 46? Now, fortunately for us, we are fairly healthy. But how we determine, as far as getting to that 46, and then if you do go with a Whitworth and [center John] Sullivan, how does that affect a Jared [Goff] and a Todd [Gurley]? But those things are all definitely connected. And those are things that we're going to discuss as the week progresses."

McVay didn't sound concerned about how resting players could influence any perceived momentum heading into the postseason.

"I think we've got the right types of guys who can handle that the right way and understand how we need to practice and what we need to do in the meantime if it is a situation where they're not going to play this coming week," he said.

How SWEET it is!

Hello everyone! Hope y’all are doin well, I’m sure these Rams should have everyone in good spirits. Hope a Merry Christmas was had by everyone as well.

How sweet it is to be a fan of this team! All the years of garbage football that we had to endure...my favorite is all the shit talking I’ve dealt with the last two years since they left....now the shit talking has calmed down quite a bit. Though I still hear the “they had to leave St.Louis to be good” argument...people are petty. I just grin!

No sweat off my back! Again...how sweet it is! Every week I waited for the wheels to fall off...but I’ll be damned, they just kept holdin on! I love it! And I love this team! Everyone have a great day. Enjoy these playoffs. Hopefully we come out okay.

What are your "most watchable" movies?

By that I mean which movies can you watch and rewatch and still thoroughly enjoy.

I mean, there are movies I've really loved watching, but after maybe the second time, I'm done. I absolutely loved The Passion of the Christ. Watched it once. Never plan to watch it again.

Different reasons for each, but it's not about "cinema" nearly as much as it's about how much fun it is to either relive a moment or simply enjoy a movie again like a comfy blanket or a favorite sweater.

So, my list in no particular order

1) Victor/Victoria Julie Andrews, James Garner and Robert Preston in a Blake Edwards comedy? Easy. And the dialogue is simply sparkling.

2) Fifth Element. Luc Besson nailed it. It's a futurists playland, fun, but thought provoking. And the multiple homages to Heavy Metal, the movie were just fantastic.

3) My Cousin Vinny. Joe Pesci is maybe the best lawyer on film outside of Gregory Peck and Spencer Tracy. And Marisa Tomei? Whole thing is just wonderful.

4) Blazing Saddles. Mel Brooks and his unbelievable cast. Fantastic script with more quotable lines than maybe any other film. Deals with race, class and a whole bunch of other issues with an unflinching approach which makes it all the more funny.

5) Deadpool. I've only seen it maybe five times, but I actually enjoy it more each time. What does it say about me that he's my favorite super hero? This is the most recent and least watched simply because I don't own it...yet. Once I get it on my iPad...that number's going WAY up. Pretty much every other film I've seen at least ten times.

6) Blade Runner. The caveat here is that there are so many variants, but there isn't one I don't like. I just like some more than others. The Vangelis score gets me every time. Iconic.

7) Young Frankenstein. Another Mel Brooks classic that has maybe the funniest scene in all of film with Gene Hackman as the blind man and Peter Boyle as the monster.

8) Despicable Me. Steve Carrell just does an amazing job, the Pharell soundtrack is phenomenal and the minions are hilarious.

9) Demolition Man. Lost in the Stallone v. Snipes shoot-em up are fantastic moments of futurism that I find fascinating. I still use "Be well" to end all my correspondence because of this movie.

10) Ghost in the Shell. Been a fan of anime since I saw Speed Racer when I was 5 in 1973. Starblazers amazed me a few years later and Ghost in the Shell was just...mindblowing. The philosophical tributaries explored keep me thinking all these years later. Brilliantly animated and executed. This is one of maybe 3 films I haven't seen 10 times only because I don't find it very often and can't decide if I want the dubbed or subtitled version.

11) Starship Troopers. I find I want to watch this every time it's on. I was floored by the embrace of militarism and propaganda in this movie and how before it was really a thing, how they made the propaganda so interactive. "Would you like to know more?" Fascinating.

12) Super Troopers. Funny, ribald and funny. I could watch it again right meow...

13) Matrix Trilogy. Still provokes so much thought that I love to watch with a bucket of popcorn in hand and just celebrate amazing imaginations.

14) Star Wars Trilogy (original). Maybe the only other trilogy that if asked by a stranger if I wanted cop a squat with a warm bucket of popcorn and watch it through...I'd likely do it.

15) Minority Report. Tom Cruise may be a lot of things, but what actor commits more to an action pic? And combining Tom Cruise with a Philip K Dick story? I'm there.

16) Taking Chance. An HBO movie starring Kevin Bacon as a Marine Colonel who signs up to escort the body of a Marine home to Wyoming. I cry throughout unapologetically. It shows what happens when a soldier/sailor/airman/marine's remains are returned to a family after the ultimate sacrifice. I watch it when I can and grab tissues instead of popcorn (damn lump in my throat won't let me eat the popcorn...). This I've only seen maybe 5 times, but only because I know how much it wrecks me. I still see it at least once a year. I think everyone should see it at least once.

17) Alien/Aliens. I LOOOOOVE the suspense and horror of the first one while I love the bigger action of the second. I've rewatched each movie recently multiple times. "Game over, man!"

18) Wall-E. This movie is so blatantly subversive that I loved it just for that. But the character Wall-E is so charming that I enjoy him every time. New take on romance as well as a broadside against homogeneity, convenience and corporatism.

19) Godfather 1&2. You all know. I can't add to why the Godfather is rewatchable beyond the libraries of books already written on the subject. "Leave the gun, take the cannolis."

20) Silence of the Lambs. Anthony Hopkins is mesmerizing and Jodi Foster is both strong and vulnerable. The film is so well put together that I can rewatch it and still feel tension and dread as the movie progresses. "It puts the lotion on the skin or it gets the hose!"

21) Caddyshack. Between Bill Murray, Rodney Dangerfield and Chevy Chase, I can't stop laughing and this movie is what, 40 years old now? "So I got that going for me."

22) Stripes. Another Bill Murray classic. "Lighten up, Francis."

23) Top Secret. Val Kilmer in a classic spoof movie. The fun is in finding all the easter eggs. Well, and the funny musical numbers are hilarious.

24) Naked Gun. Lt. Frank Drebin is just plain hilarious. A very fun watch with repeated laughs.

25) Trading Places. Can't tell you how many times I've stopped what I'm doing and watched this while going through the guide.

26) Blues Brothers. Same as Trading Places. I've honestly lost count as to how many times I've seen this movie. Even my kids quote it now.

27) Airplane! We've watched it so many times that if I spill on myself, my kids well comment on my "drinking problem"...

And lastly,
28) Groundhog Day. Bill Murray is a favorite of mine (when I built my render farm, I named all of the servers after my favorite Bill Murray movies.) Super funny again and again as well as thought-provoking. If you had an infinite number of chances to get something right, what would that path look like?

Edit: 2) Can't believe I left out the Pitch Black trilogy! Pitch Black, Chronicles of Riddick and Riddick. So there are 3 trilogies that I'm totally down for whenever. Love the character of Riddick. I really enjoy a solid exploration of the anti-hero and this is my favorite of these.

This isn't a list of my favorite movies because that list would be much, much longer. I could do a top 100 pretty easily.

No, this is my "will watch a lot of times and enjoy it each and every time" list.

What are yours?

Rest Players or Keep Momentum????

I really hate the idea of giving players a week off going in to the playoffs.

From NBC Sports Bay Area:

Coach Sean McVay intimated that some of his top players will not suit up Sunday when the 49ers come to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in hopes of finishing Kyle Shanahan's first season on a five-game win streak.

“Being locked into that 3rd or 4th seed — every single game is important — but I think it will provide an opportunity for us to potentially get some guys healthier, rest them, give some other guys a chance to step up,” McVay said via the Rams’ official website.

“It is one of those deals where I think you might see us rest some guys and use this week where, you don’t ever take anything for granted, but knowing that you do have a home playoff game regardless of how things play out, this might provide an opportunity for us to get some guys healthy.”

Quarterback Jared Goff and running back Todd Gurley are among the top players on the Rams who could sit out the game. The Rams are obligated to suit up 46 players from their 53-man roster.

Such players as linebackers Mark Barron and Alec Ogletree, along with left tackle Andrew Whitworth and center John Sullivan, could also be held out of the game against the 49ers.

“That’s a luxury that we want to take advantage of," McVay said. “And everything that we do is what we think is best for our football team.”

Rams' 2018 home schedule

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/la-sp-rams-2018-home-schedule-20171226-story.html

Rams' 2018 home schedule includes the Eagles, Vikings, Packers, Chiefs and Chargers
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Gary KleinContact Reporter

The Rams still have games to play in their turnaround season, but they already know their 2018 home opponents.

The Rams, 11-4 and champions of the NFC West, conclude the 2017 regular season on Sunday at the Coliseum against the San Francisco 49ers. They will host a playoff game the following week.

According to information online as part of the team’s 2018 season-ticket renewal application, the NFC West will be paired next season with the NFC North and the AFC West.

The Rams will play host to their NFC West division members — the Arizona Cardinals, San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks — and the Minnesota Vikings, Green Bay Packers, Kansas City Chiefs, Chargers and Philadelphia Eagles.

Because the Rams are still playing at the Coliseum as a temporary facility, one of their home games is again expected to be part of the International Series and will be played in London or, possibly, Mexico City.

Based on the home schedule, the Rams will have road games against the Cardinals, 49ers and Seahawks, and non-division road games against the Oakland Raiders, Denver Broncos, Chicago Bears and Detroit Lions. One other opponent, from the NFC South, is to still be determined because the division winner has not been decided.

The New Orleans Saints and Carolina Panthers are 11-4 going into this week’s games. The Saints are at Tampa Bay, the Panthers at Atlanta.

Playoff scenarios

So apparently McVay wants to rest the starters vs the Whiners. I want to go over some scenarios for the Rams going into the playoffs.

1. The Rams beat the 49ers with backups, take the number 3 seed and play either Atlanta or Seattle at home. Then we go to Minnesota and possibly get a home game for the championship game. For me personally, I’m not looking forward to playing Seattle for a 3rd time. I know we smacked them last game, but their defense was deflated. And they’re going to get some guys healthy coming up. Lets hope Atlanta takes Carolina at home. Which leads to the next point.

2. We lose to the 49ers, Carolina and New Orleans both win, we take the 4th seed and get the Panthers at home. Seattle most likely beats the Cardinals which means they would get the Saints. Not a good matchup for them. Saints vs Vikings in a slug fest round 2. We go into Philly to extract our revenge and then have to go to New Orleans or Minn for the NFC championship. Either way, we would have a tough road as the 4th seed.

3. We lose to the 49ers, Carolina wins, New Orleans loses. This is my most ideal situation. But least likely to happen since Tampa Bay is a pile of dogshit this year. However, we could get the Saints at home in the wildcard and 99.9% of us would rather play the Panthers instead of the Saints in the championship game.

There’s plenty more ways it could go, but these are the scenarios I see playing out for the most part. If we win, nothing else really matters. But I hope we play Atlanta instead of Seattle if that happen. What say you?

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