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Whitworths value cannot not be measured...

Wish I had a screenshot of the moment I'm about to mention. A picture is worth a thousand words they say.

Saffold had just left the game with an injured ankle. Blythe comes in to replace him. It is still an injury timeout and the camera is on Blythe as he is standing in an informal huddle next to Whitworth. Now Whit is just a huge man and he towers over Blythe. But what it looks like Whit is doing is having a very serious teaching moment with Blythe.

He is talking to Blythe in a very serious posture. Not joking or asking what's he doing after the game but it looks like he is imparting some serious coaching on young Blythe.

Leadership at it's finest. Making sure his new left guard knows what is going on and what to watch for and how to handle it.

The stats show remarkable Jamon Browns turnaround has been

http://theramswire.usatoday.com/2017/11/13/nfl-los-angeles-rams-jamon-brown-stats-offensive-line/


Cameron DaSilva | 8 hours ago

Before the season began, it was unclear how the right side of the Rams’ offensive line would shake out. Rob Havenstein had experience at both guard and tackle, while Jamon Brown played all across the offensive line in 2016.

Sean McVay dabbled with each player lining up at both right guard and right tackle throughout training camp, but it became evident that Brown was best suited inside with Havenstein on the edge.


Rams PFF grades: Donald, Brockers lead dominant defensive performance

After the first five weeks of the season, there were some doubting Brown’s ability to play right guard for the Rams. While he was doing well as a run blocker, he struggled mightily in pass protection.

According to Pro Football Focus, no guard allowed more pressures than Brown in the first five games. Since then, he’s turned into one of the best guards in the NFL over the course of the past five weeks.





Brown’s elevated play has made the offensive line as a whole much better. He hasn’t allowed a single sack all season and has been called for holding only once. He’s played a big role in keeping Jared Goff upright with the team only allowing 13 sacks all season.

If he can continue this hot streak, the Rams’ offensive line could finish the year as one of the best units in all of football. Quite the difference a year makes.

Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/PFF_Zoltan/status/930098791352602630

Janoris Jenkins

Is getting completely lambasted on NY talk shows for his game yesterday. Anybody see it? He was completely toasted on a couple long TD's, missed tackles and seemed as if he quit playing. This is following up being suspended against Rams week prior. Media calling for Jints to cut him. What a difference a year makes.

http://www.nj.com/giants/index.ssf/2017/11/did_giants_janoris_jenkins_run_himself_out_of_town.html

A new defensive starter & week 10 snap counts ...

  • Rams make change to starting defensive line
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By: Cameron DaSilva | 5 hours ago

Sunday’s game between the Los Angeles Rams and Houston Texans was close for about 30 minutes before things got out of hand in the second half. The Rams scored 24 points after the half, while shutting out the Texans in the final 30 minutes.

The final score was 33-7, showing just how dominant the Rams were on Sunday as they cruised to their third straight blowout victory. As a result of the 26-point margin, several Rams backups saw the field when they otherwise would not have. Most of the second-string defense was in the game for the final few possessions, allowing the starters to rest and stay out of harm’s way.


Studs and duds from the Rams' 33-7 win over the Texans

With Week 10 in the books, let’s take a look at how Sean McVay and Wade Phillips managed the Rams’ snap counts on Sunday.

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The starting offensive line played all 66 snaps with the exception of Rodger Saffold, who left with an ankle injury. Jared Goff also played every snap, which was a bit surprising. Cooper Kupp, who had six catches for 47 yards, saw the most playing time of any receiver, being on the field for 85 percent of the offensive snaps.

On defense, there was a significant change made atop the depth chart. Tanzel Smart, who had started four games and struggled mightily at nose tackle, played just 22.9 percent of the team’s defensive snaps – his lowest of the season. He was benched as the starter in favor of Ethan Westbrooks, who played 31 snaps (44 percent).

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He and Morgan Fox were the biggest beneficiaries of Smart’s decreased playing time, which is a trend to keep an eye on. Smart hasn’t recorded a single tackle in the past two games, so his snap count could continue to decrease.

Rookie outside linebacker Ejuan Price also made his Rams debut, playing 21 snaps on defense and three on special teams.

http://theramswire.usatoday.com/201...-houston-texans-week-10-snap-counts-starters/

Rams'"D" had some first occur yesterday @ OLB'er

Yesterdays game the defense was without OSLB'er Robert Quinn due to being inactive for the first time this season. This caused other firsts for a few Rams. Matt Longacre got his first start in 3 seasons. Matt Longacre also got his first fumble recovery which led to the Rams first points Sunday.

In addition OSLB'er Samson Ebukam saw considerable amount of action too. Thus Samson got his first sack of the season. Plus Samson forced his first forced fumble! The Rams 5th OSLB'er Ejuan Price was activated for the first time of the 2017 season. I would hope that rookie 4th round selection Samson Ebukam should see much more action as this season continues. @ the same time I could care less if I see Rob Quinn again unless there is an injury..

What Vikings Fans Are Saying Before The Game

Let's kick this off early. A rule of thumb for these "What (insert team name) Fans Are Saying" threads is if the team we are about to play sucks, their fans will have little to say. But if their team is doing well, they will have plenty to say about the Rams.
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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2017/11/12/case-keenum-wants-to-stay-with-vikings/

Case Keenum wants to stay with Vikings
Posted by Mike Florio on November 12, 2017

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Getty images

Quarterback Case Keenum is enjoying the best year of his career. Operating on a one-year, $2 million deal, Keenum will have plenty of options for 2018. He hopes to stay right where he is, however.

“I love it here,” Keenum told PFT by phone after Sunday’s 38-30 win over Washington. “I love these guys. My wife and I love it here.”

While he may not love his current situation of starter with a temporary feel to it (given the return of Teddy Bridgewater to the active roster), Keenum worries only about what he can control.

“Every situation has prepared me for the next situation,” he said.

Keenum mentioned his situation last year in L.A. Voted a team captain and named the Week One starter, he faced constant questions about being replaced for then-rookie Jared Goff.

“It didn’t matter how well or how poorly I played,” Keenum said. “It was the same story, different verse.”

He said he’s able to ignore the chatter about his status because he doesn’t ready many story about the NFL, focusing instead on honing his craft. Keenum also deftly handled questions about the impact of being the starter with an asterisk on his ability to lead, avoiding any type of complaints about the impact of his tenuous status on his ability to lead, while also pointing out that being a leader is a huge part of his overall craft.

Keenum has made it part of his craft to forge a strong relationship with his receivers, particularly Adam Thielen. They spent a lot of time working out in the offseason, and Keenum said it’s now “paying off.”

Keenum praised Thielen as a “friendly target,” and Keenum directed some friendly ribbing at Keenum, explaining that the ultra-competitive wideout “can’t beat me at ping pong.”

A couple of interceptions on consecutive passes nearly allowed Washington to return from a huge deficit and beat the Vikings. Keenum admitted that the picks were “silly mistakes.”

He hasn’t made many mistakes, silly or otherwise, of them this year, and it’s not silly to assume that he’ll hold his job for a bit longer.

Next up? The Rams.

“I think anybody would get a little more juiced,” Keenum said about facing his former team.

The fans will be getting juiced, too. Next week’s contest becomes one of the best games of the year, with a pair of 7-2 teams fighting for what could be a possible first-round bye in the playoffs.
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Keenum is the man and he’s earned it. The ’s are going to be exposed next Sunday for the weak schedule they’ve played. It will be sweet justice for Case.

Football in LA, lol. The NFC N is going to show you how it’s done.
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It seems like the more people doubt Keenum, the better he plays. I have been a Bridgewater fan and love his poise and leadership, but Teddy’s never brought this level of energy to the field. It’s possible the offense could be even more explosive under TB, but what if it isn’t?

In that case, I’d imagine the Vikes will be very happy Keenum wants to stay.
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Keenum played it brilliantly today. First, he played lights out until he was assured of getting the start next week. Then he threw those two interceptions to keep the game just close enough that they wouldn’t bring Teddy in just to get him some work. He’ll keep Teddy on the bench for the rest of the season with that strategy.
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Zimmer would be crazy to switch QBs now. No matter how much we love and respect Teddy, this is a business, and we gotta stick with the hot hand, esp with a division and 1st round Bye in playoffs @ stake.
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Zimmer says “I have a plan” for getting Teddy into the game, I wonder what that could be?
But in Football you never take out the hot hand, and Case has the hot hand right now!
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https://scout.com/nfl/vikings/Board/102855/Contents/Rams-Key-to-the-game-Smash-Goff-110400044

Rams Key to the game - Smash Goff

I am very curious what this guy has got under the hood. He seems soft to me. Kinda silver spoon vibe. If he gets hit often how will he respond?

I think he will respond with a loss.

Hopefully the D line will be full strength, healthy, and ready to go.
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The key will be shutting down Gurley
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This.

And don't let Austin get a big play.
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I seriously think our D is based on designated coverage's and zones that we have never heard of. At times I"m shocked at the zone coverage that gives up a 1st down. But usually it runs the clock incrementally and is a matter of attrition o the clock. It's a amazing system to watch the D...It's a science.
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With our D, I think it all comes down to stopping the run and good tackling.

When we make the other team one dimensional, our pass rush eventually wears them down. Generally, our team has been very good at taking away the big play. If you take away the big play, the run, and YAC, the other team will eventually make a mistake (turnover, blown-protection, drive-killing penalty etc.)
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The Rams have not faced a defense the caliber of MN, so they may be in for a rude awakening
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Conversely our defense has not faced a running game the caliber of the Rams, so I hope it is not us that are rudely awakened.
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Well considering we faced the number 3 Rushing Offense and held it to 60 yards and have face 3 other top ten rushing offenses I think we will be alright
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Contain Gurley

Smash Goff

I'd be a lot happier to keep Goff around 200 yards than keep Gurley under 100.

Goff could be the weak link. Smash the heart.. Win the game.

Obviously gameplan both. But I see the win through Goff crushing. We'll see how it plays out next week! Amped!!
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I think our pass defense will be fine against Goff. I think our biggest priority will be Gurley, and more specifically Gurley as a receiving target. If I were them, I would use Gurley heavily in the screen game to try and mitigate our pass rush.
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I agree. I get the feeling we're going to play a lot of base and rely on a 4-man rush with gap discipline. Barr can spy Gurley with Harry floating over the top to prevent big plays and lay big hits on the underneath stuff.

This should force Goff into situations where he has to convert third downs and sustain long drives.

The Rams have been enjoying blowouts for several weeks now, we'll see how their young signal caller does in a tightly contested game where he is probably (hopefully) playing from behind for once.
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Outside of the Steelers, this is the first legitimate NFL squad we will face.

Let’s not worry about whether the Rams are for real, we need to worry about whether we are for real. We have beaten the bottom of the NFL and these guys are no joke. They have demolished several teams including blanking a Bruce Arians club that got embarrassed.

This game is a microcosm for the playoffs. If our defense can stop them, then we can compete with the Eagles and the improved Saints. If our offense can hold its own, we have a chance. If not, we should move to Teddy to see if he can improve our consistency because we know what we have in Keenum. This is Keenum’s key game. If he plays well and we win, he may have the job the rest of the year.
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Ah the Saints are 7-2, Ravens 4-5, Lions and Packer 5-4. Redskins are 4-5

The only quality wins I would give the Ram are the Cowboys and Jaguars all others have been against teams on a downward trend. Colts, 49ers, Cards, Giants, Texans (with vibro QB Savage)
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Yeah, and did you see how many points they put on the scoreboard in those games? 46, 41, 33, 51, and 33 points respectively. They did exactly what a great team should do to those opponents. They are +134 in points differential.

This is a dangerous team and we have to pressure Goff so he doesn't have five seconds to stand back there and hit those 30-40 yard plus completions. He threw a 94 yd td pass yesterday. Viking will win this game but they are going to have to respect the big play capability of the Rams to keep them from racking up the points.
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I think the key is Gurley...we contain him and make Goff try and beat us I think the Purple win. Donald is a beast and Ogletree is a good player and I think they have a high end CB as well....built a little like us on D but a jv version. Like another poster mentioned the Rams have enjoyed a lot of blow out wins...I'm curious to see if we take Gurley away and turn the game into a slugfest can they hang with us....I just don't see it at home.

I'm not saying we cant lose this game, but I think the Skins on the road were a tougher test IMO...and the O did more than enough with the D having a bit of a hiccup game....I dontt see another hiccup coming from the D, and I just see the O getting better and better with more time together....Purple are playing good ball right now

Lotta seeding implications in this game...were ahead of the Aints, who I think take the south, and I think the Rams will take the west. So if we can beat them at our house thatll be head to head wins against Div winners making the Path to the #2 and possibly #1 seed very attainable...Detroit as well, but lets take'm one week at a time....SKOL

Flakka

This reminds me of the Walking Dead zombies or what life was like during the 60's among my psychedelic using hippie pals, minus the face chewing. :sneaky:
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http://www.kansascity.com/news/local/article184248578.html

flakka


Naked people rampage through Missouri town, barking and showering in soda water
BY ADAM DARBY


Last weekend got downright bizarre in the eastern Missouri town of Sullivan, and police say they know why.

Four people went on a rampage, barking and yelling, breaking into buildings, even stripping off their clothes and showering in soda water, police say. They suspect the synthetic drug flakka is behind the behavior.

“We had multiple incidents this past weekend of people on some kind of substance acting out of their minds,” Sullivan Police Lt. Patrick Johnson told the Sullivan Independent News. “Barking like dogs, running up and down the street, or other farm animals, entering people’s homes, breaking into a business, yelling outside of local businesses.”

Two people were arrested, and some of the users were treated at a hospital.

The drugs have not yet been tested, but police believe the users mixed methamphetamine with flakka, a manmade drug that has caused strange behavior in other places.

Last year, The Star reported that flakka was hitting hard in Florida, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio and other parts of the country and that police were worried that it would spread to Missouri and Kansas City. It was causing a rash of emergency room visits and overdose deaths.

In one highly publicized Florida case, a man reportedly high on flakka gnawed on and disfigured another man’s face before he was shot to death by police. Another user tried to break down the door of a police station in Fort Lauderdale, and a few weeks later, a man impaled himself while trying to climb a fence around the same station.

Also known as alpha-PVP, flakka has a similar chemical makeup to other drugs commonly known as “bath salts,” according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

It typically comes in a white or pink crystalline form and is foul-smelling. It can be eaten, snorted, injected, or vaporized in an electronic cigarette device, according to the national institute, which has included flakka on a list of emerging trends.

Sullivan, a town of about 7,000 residents, is 70 miles southwest of St. Louis.

Los Angeles Rams - Chances of making the playoffs: 85.2%

http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/pag...-10-2017-nfl-season-nine-contenders-six-spots

By Bill Barnwell/ESPN Staff Writer


Los Angeles Rams (7-2)
Chances of making the playoffs: 85.2 percent


You might not want to give the Rams too much credit for mopping the floor with the Cardinals, Giants and Texans over the past four weeks, but history tells us that blowing out bad teams can be a better indicator of future success than squeaking out wins over good teams.

Throw in the Colts and 49ers and the Rams have gone 5-0 against the dregs of the league while outscoring their opposition by more than 26 points per game.

I'd argue that the Rams already proved they were for real by beating the Cowboys in Dallas in Week 4, but if you're looking to see how the Rams might fare against playoff competition, you'll get your chance over the rest of the season. Los Angeles gets to travel to Arizona and has a home game against the 49ers to finish the season, but its other five games are against stiff competition.

Sean McVay's team will host the Eagles and Saints and leave California to face the Seahawks, Titans and Vikings, with its trip to Minnesota coming this week. Each of those five teams have a 70-plus percent chance of making the postseason.

We should be past the point of wondering whether the Rams are for real. Their offense isn't going anywhere, even against tougher competition. The only concern should be injuries, and while Jared Goff is still being pressured at a rate well above league average (29.3 percent), he has been sacked on only 4.3 percent of his dropbacks, which is sixth best in the league.

The Rams also could get the ball out quicker to ease some of the stress on Goff, given that he's averaging 2.7 seconds before throwing the ball, which is the sixth-longest wait in the league.

McVay has done a good job of taking some of the stress off Todd Gurley in these recent blowouts. While Gurley had 26 touches in the pre-bye 33-0 shutout of the Cardinals, the Rams gave Gurley just 18 touches in the win over the Giants and 17 touches during Sunday's victory against the Texans. Fantasy owners won't be thrilled with the throttling down, but the Rams will need bigger doses of Gurley in the month to come.

The Rams are in great playoff shape, but that rematch against the Seahawks looms large in their race for the NFC West. The Times' model gives the Rams a 78 percent chance of making the postseason and a 52 percent chance of winning the division. If they beat Seattle at home, the Rams' chances of winning the division soar to 83 percent, but their shot at the West falls to 41 percent if they can't overcome the league's best home-field advantage.

Vikings game is the cement

This game is key. I know they all are, but think about it.
  • We've just gone through the weakest portion of our schedule and have won each by double-digits
  • The media is clearly taking notice, but *almost* all comments are followed by disclaimer of weaker schedule and the tough games coming up
  • This is the beginning of a gauntlet facing division leaders in more than 1/2 of our remaining games
Sooooo, when (not if) we beat the Vikes, the conversation turns from "Look who the Rams have to play" to "Well they still have to play the Rams" for every other NFL team on our schedule. Rams will be cemented in as a no-joke elite NFC team.

I can't wait.

Peter King: MMQB - 11/13/17

These are excerpts. To read the whole article click the second link below. As usual, lots of Peter King's obsession with the Patriots on display here. Practically nothing on the Rams. But I give him a pass today because he did pick the Rams to win the Super Bowl. :)

http://theramswire.usatoday.com/201...rams-patriots-super-bowl-lii-prediction-2018/

Peter King of MMQB picks Rams to beat Patriots in Super Bowl LII
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https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/11/13/bill-belichick-patriots-tom-landry-victories-nfl-week-10-mmqb

NFL Week 10: The Hoodie, the Fedora and Sorting Through the Mess of 7-2 Teams
By Peter King


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At one point Sunday night during New England’s 41-16 dismantling of Denver, NBC flashed a graphic showing that Bill Belichick was about to tie Tom Landry for third place on the all-time coaching wins list. The cameras focused on Belichick on the sideline. As usual, he looked like a member of the grounds crew. A fairly unkempt one, with a gray Patriots hoodie, the hood askew over Belichick’s head and his headset, making the image even weirder.

I thought of Tom Landry on the sideline. Hart, Schaffner & Marx suit, white shirt with every button buttoned, conservative necktie, stylish fedora and spit-shined wing tips. He looked like a “Mad Men” senior exec.

Appearances aside, you know what Landry and Belichick had in common, don’t you? Both were extremely serious Giants defensive coordinators for six seasons, a generation apart: Landry from 1954 to ’59, Belichick from 1985 to ’90.

Fitting they are linked now on the all-time wins list, though not for long. Belichick has miles to go before he sleeps, and he may just catch George Halas (number two, 54 wins away), though likely not Don Shula (number one, 77 wins away). Belichick versus Landry, whose career record is different because, in part, he coached for 18 of his 29 seasons with a 14-game schedule, while Belichick has always coached 16 regular-season games.

The other thing I noticed Sunday night: These two coaches did it their way. Different ways. The Patriots demolished Denver with the same triggerman as always, Tom Brady, but so many fledgling pieces—first-year back Rex Burkhead scored a touchdown and blocked a punt, off-and-on factor Dion Lewis scored two touchdowns, vet tight end Martellus Bennett (who just arrived on campus Friday) caught three passes, and the Patriots made four game-changing plays on special teams.

Dallas had a more solid base of players led by Bob Lilly, Mel Renfro, Roger Staubach (after Landry finally settled on his QB, following a few years of a Staubach-Craig Morton competition) and, later, Randy White. When New England got transient, the Patriots still won. When Dallas got transient, Landry began to struggle. Different styles, winning in different ways. Belichick almost seems to relish the roster churn, and with five Super Bowl victories, he’s had different stalwarts on each team. Only Brady stays the same.

Bennett, with a bum shoulder, got to New England late Thursday night, signed, and reported for duty Friday morning. You wouldn’t think of Belichick as a charmer, and he’s not. But players play for him, or they’re not going to play for him. “Bill was like, ‘Can you practice?’” Bennett said. “I said I just want to go to sleep right now.’ He said, ‘Oh, it’s Friday. Just go out there and get some snaps.’ I think he knows how to talk to me. So I’m like, ‘All right, I’ll go out there.’”

One other thing Landry and Belichick share: They’re taciturn, but it never looks like the game is eating them alive. Thus Landry can stay in one spot for 29 years. Who knows how long Belichick stays in New England, but he won’t leave because the game keeps him up at night. “He’s the same on a Sunday in May as he is on a game day in the fall,” said former quarterback and low-level Patriots assistant Chris Simms. Stress? Not them.

I like the fact that, for a week, Landry and Belichick, who share a lot in NFL history, will share number three on the all-time NFL coaching list. It’s cool.

* * *

The winners—After previously 0-9 San Francisco won its first game of the year, 31-21 over the Giants, here’s what we saw in the Niners locker room:

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The losers—New York Postback page, demanding the firing of Ben McAdoo: IT CAN’T WAIT. Daily News:

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That’s what I like. Perspective.

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THERE’S QUITE A NICE PACK CHASING THE EAGLES


Eagles, 8-1. Let’s give them the top seed and top billing this morning. It’s only fair, and with a three-game lead in the NFC East now, it’s entirely likely they’ll win one of the top two seeds and get a bye out of the wild-card round.


After that? Clueless. My attempt at rating teams two through six in the league, the 7-2 teams one beat behind the Eagles.

2. New England (7-2). As usual, the Patriots didn’t get too out of whack when they lost two games in the first month of the season. They’re not blowing teams away now (at least not until Sunday night in Denver), but after the early defensive debacle they’ve held five straight foes under 18 points.

3. Los Angeles Rams (7-2). This should not be the determining factor in ranking the Rams behind the Patriots, but in this case, it’s the tiebreaker with the Patriots for number two: The vast majority of truly significant actors in the Rams’ rise have never played in a playoff games, never mind won a Super Bowl. But I’ll take any team that’s won by 33, 34 and 26 the last three weeks.

4. New Orleans (7-2). The Saints won a game 47-10 on Sunday (at Buffalo), and Drew Brees did not contribute a touchdown pass. Historic occasion. Rookie defensive backs Marshon Lattimore and Marcus Williams are so good so early that each could make the Pro Bowl this year—if voters voted on merit. This is the team Asshole Face dreamed of coaching, a balanced team that plays defense, and he could hang around a couple of years to see it through.

5. Pittsburgh (7-2). After a wholly unimpressive win in Indianapolis, even the staunchest Steeler fans will say they’re worried. Pittsburgh has averaged 19.6 points in its last five games, which is not good enough. Watching the Colts bottle up Le’Veon Bell had to be disconcerting too, because it’s not a great run D in Indy. But the Steelers will be able to win playoff games because of Ben Roethlisberger’s weaponry and a defense that keeps getting better under coordinator Keith Butler.

6. Minnesota (7-2). Case Keenum, with the hot breath of franchise favorite Teddy Bridgewater on the back of his neck, threw for four touchdowns for the first time in his life. Who’d have figured, in a game at a playoff contender, that Keenum would lead the Vikings to 35 points in the first 35 minutes? Vikes 38, Washington 30.

Now Mike Zimmer has to carefully manage the return to play of Bridgewater, who is one of the biggest local heroes in recent Minnesota sports history. That’s going to be tricky, because you don’t know, whether a rusty quarterback will be better than an average one playing hot.

* * *

Jerry Jones vs. Roger Goodell: The Questions, the Answers and an Explanation of What’s Ahead


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GETTY IMAGES

I had a longtime football executive tell me something last week about this strange season that hit home with me. He said there’s so much newsy stuff happening around the league right now—the player protests during the anthem, the fight for the commissioner’s office, squabbling over what Roger Goodell’s salary should be, why TV ratings are tanking—that when Sunday afternoons come and the games come on, you say, Oh yeah … football!

My little role in this happened Sunday morning, when we published my story at The MMQBabout Dallas owner Jerry Jones’s desire to overthrow the Goodell contract extension and perhaps Goodell himself. In the wake of that story, here are some pressing questions and answers about where the NFL stands on the state of Goodell, and my answers will be compiled from recent interviews and best guesses concerning an ever-evolving story:

WHY IS JERRY JONES TRYING TO SABOTAGE THE GOODELL CONTRACT EXTENSION?

I believe it’s because he thinks Goodell hasn’t performed like a great commissioner should. I believe it’s also because he thinks the fix is in on the proposed contract to the commissioner … that even though the contract offer to Goodell is 88 percent incentives, Goodell will still end up with compensation of at least $25 million a year even if the league has an awful year.

And I believe Jones’s feeling is, if the fix isn’t in, let the owners see exactly how the annual compensation package will be structured, down to the precise formulas that will determine exactly what Goodell makes.

DOES JONES WANT TO BE COMMISSIONER? IS THAT WHAT THIS IS ABOUT?
I’ve heard this question from several people this week, and my answer: It would stun me. Jones does not want to be commissioner. He already has his dream job, and he’s had it for 28 years. He wants to make the Cowboys great, and he wants to keep the Cowboys as the most valuable sports franchise in the United States. I just would be stunned if Jones would want to spend 15 minutes trying to make the Bengals a more valuable franchise.

SO IF NOT JONES AS COMMISSIONER, WHO?
I don’t know. I believe he has one in mind, but I do not know who it is. I’ve heard Bill Polian’s name thrown around, and I know Polian is a Jones favorite because he’s tough, but I have no idea if he’s a legit name in Jones’s mind.

WHAT’S THE MOST LIKELY OUTCOME OF THE GOODELL CONTRACT TALKS?
After the smoke clears, and after Jones tries his best to find partners to scuttle the deal, I believe the commissioner will re-sign through 2024. It’s interesting. Someone who is well plugged-in and who spoke to Jones in the past week told me Sunday that Jones believes he has more support from ownership than he had when he successfully prevented owners from giving money back to networks when they were in financial straits 24 years ago.

He might have more support, but I don’t know who these owners are (outside of Dan Snyder and possibly Jim Irsay and Stan Kroenke). I don’t put anything past Jones, but I can’t see how he musters enough ownership support to kill this Goodell deal … unless, and I use this asterisk advisedly … there are further developments such as the ESPN report Sunday that said Goodell’s final negotiation request was an annual compensation package of $49.5 million plus use of a private plane for life.

League spokesman Joe Lockhart quickly denied that report, but Adam Schefter and Chris Mortensen are eminently reliable reporters, and there’s no question they’re trusted by league owners and officials. So if a couple of reports like that get legs in the coming days, I could see some owners say, I’m not feeling very good about Goodell right now. which could give the Jones side some momentum.

IS THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE UNANIMOUS IN ITS SUPPORT OF THE GOODELL CONTRACT?
Good question. Jones believes if it isn’t, chairman Arthur Blank has misled the ownership, and the deal should be reopened. The key member of the committee is Houston owner Bob McNair, who was outspoken in his criticism of the league office recently.

Most people around the league think McNair’s criticism stems from Goodell’s refusal to back McNair’s explanation of “inmates running the prison,” when McNair claims he was referring to league office employees, not players in the league. Goodell reportedly would not speak out in support of McNair. But this weekend, I heard McNair supports Goodell and will vote to approve a new contract for him.

WITH GOODELL’S CONTRACT VALID THOUGH THE END OF THE 2018 LEAGUE YEAR, WHAT’S THE HURRY TO RE-UP?
Owners think it would send a message to the advertising world and all communities that the owners are solidly behind Goodell. But with the continued turbulence the league is facing, you can’t help but wonder—and Jones clearly does—what the hurry is.

What if the league gets this deal done next week, and then finds it has Goodell in office for the next six-plus years, and more crises roil the league? It’s not dumb to hold off doing this deal until mid-2018. It’s pragmatic.

COULD GOODELL SIGN SOME FORM OF A DEAL TODAY?
I am told no—contrary to several reports, there is not a contract on his desk that he can sign right now.

As I wrote Sunday: Normally I’d say this is over. It’s a done deal; Jones can’t win. I still think it’s unlikely Jones has success, but this is not a normal owner.

Jones has taken the unpopular side on several occasions in his ownership career. A quarter-century ago he fought the NFL’s TV Committee as it proposed to give money back to the money-losing networks. Jones won, and the lucrative marriage between Fox and the NFL was born.

In 1995, the NFL attempted to enforce its exclusive rights under the NFL Trust to prevent the Cowboys from pouring Pepsi in Texas Stadium instead of the league’s cola partner, Coca-Cola, among other sponsorship deals. Jones countersued, and he ended up settling with the NFL to maintain his deals with Pepsi and other non-NFL partners.

Do not underestimate Jones. He has won when it has appeared darkest before. Jones could find some kindred ownership souls in the coming days and weeks. But there is one difference between this fight and Jones’s previous ones: Despite how tarnished Goodell is, Jones doesn’t have many partners—at least now—in trying to overthrow the current way of doing business.

* * *

Case Keenum Show: Vikings Offense Explodes With Teddy Bridgewater Waiting in Wings

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PATRICK SMITH/GETTY IMAGES

The story was ready, and it was going to be perfect. Minnesota quarterback Teddy Bridgewater dressed for his first football game in 22 months Sunday, and even though the Vikings would start the purported placeholder of the quarterback job, Case Keenum, at Washington, wouldn’t it be dramatic if Bridgewater relieved Keenum at some point and got the save for the NFC North leaders.

It would have been spectacular, but it would not be realized. Keenum saw to that. Driving the Vikings to five touchdowns in the game’s first 33 minutes, and throwing for four touchdown for his first time as a pro, Keenum was the star in Minnesota’s bombs-away 38-30 win at Washington.

“Teddy saw me before the game, and he was smiling,” the 29-year-old Keenum told me from the Vikings’ bus after the game. “He was happy to be back, and I was thrilled to have him back. He said to me, ‘Smile! Have fun.’ He’s just the best teammate. It’s like I was telling someone before the game today: Teddy brings up the cool factor of our quarterback group exponentially.”

The Vikings have been careful to not make any long-term announcements at the quarterback position, though Bridgewater is very likely their long-term QB of the future. It would be surprising but not stunning if the Vikings made a change under center this week with the defensively aggressive Rams coming to town, but it's certainly not impossible to imagine.

Keenum was not just a facilitator Sunday—not just a quarterback along for the ride with an excellent one-two receiver punch in Stefon Diggs and emerging star Adam Thielen. Keenum lasered a 51-yard throw down the right sideline for Diggs, a perfectly placed deep ball. He showed excellent touch on a lofted pop throw to Thielen down the left sideline.

Under pressure and about to get creamed by Washington rushers Will Compton and Terrell McClain, Keenum fired a perfect pass up the left seam to Thielen. And later Keenum rolled out and waited, waited, waited for Thielen to get free in the end zone and threw a perfect strike, with Josh Norman draped on Thielen, for a touchdown.

Keenum finished 21 of 29 for 304 yards and four touchdowns, with two picks. He was not perfect. But this very likely was the best game of his 34-game NFL life, a career that has seen him serve as the backup and start for the Texans, Rams and Vikings in six seasons. It’s been a long, winding and oft-frustrating road for the Texan. He’s from Abilene and went to the University of Houston, and his voice still is Texas all the way.

“What a blast,” Keenum said. “So rewarding. I’ll never forget, early in my career, we were struggling in Houston [with the Texans], and after one game, [MLB pitcher] John Lackey, he’s from the same hometown as me, and we know each other some … really good dude. He’s been through everything in baseball—played in some of the biggest games at the highest level, and I respect him a lot. He sent me a text. I can give you the edited version. He said, ‘Remember this day, because days like this are what makes winning so good.’

“Man, he’s right. Days like today are why you put your hat in the ring. Let’s be honest: If they played this game on paper, I wouldn’t be in this league. But it’s a game for competitors, and I’m a competitor.”

So, I asked Keenum, what was it like for you all week knowing that everyone in Minnesota, and many other places, want to see the Bridgewater return happen theatrically … and very soon.

“I have been preparing for this situation the whole year,” Keenum said. “I didn’t do an interview last year in L.A. without being asked about [rookie first-round pick] Jared Goff. So I get it. I am a huge Teddy fan. First, he’s just a beautiful thrower. I’ve got tremendous respect for him. He’s an instrumental part of our quarterback room, and all he’s been is helpful.

A great teammate. I have had a serious knee injury. I know what he’s going through. But mostly, I’m able to compartmentalize it. I just figure, hey, it’s like I’ve got a buddy who owns a Ferrari, and he’s out of town, and he’s letting me drive it. So as long as they leave me the keys, I’m gonna keep driving this car.”

No one has said anything to Keenum about the future, except, “Get ready to go this week.” He doesn’t ask. “No one can predict the future,” he said, “and I’m not going to try.”

Rams at Vikings this week. Goff at Keenum ... or Bridgewater. If Keenum plays, it will be an emotional day for him. “Someone’s gonna have to slap me before the game—hard,” Keenum said, and you could almost hear his wide smile through the phone from Maryland. “This game means something to me.”

They all do.

* * *

The Award Section

OFFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Mark Ingram, running back, New Orleans. Not just for his production (21 carries, 131 yards, three touchdowns), but for how hard he runs consistently, and for going into Buffalo and absolutely dominating the Bills on the ground the way the Saints used to dominate teams through the air. New Orleans: 48 carries, 298 yards (!), six touchdown runs (!!).

Case Keenum, quarterback, Minnesota. As noted above, Keenum’s first NFL day with four touchdown passes was the highlight of his NFL life. Minnesota’s 38-30 win over Washington kept the Vikings two games clear of the Lions and Packers in the NFC North.

DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Adrian Clayborn, defensive end, Atlanta. With four major injuries requiring surgery in the previous five seasons, Clayborn seemed destined to be that guy who never would fulfill his NFL promise. The Bucs cut him loose after the 2014 season, and he landed in Atlanta. “God had a reason,” Clayborn said from Atlanta on Sunday night, after his six-sack dismantling of the Dallas Cowboys. “And I don’t really ask why. I just know today’s a good day, and I’m happy.” Clayborn took advantage of Dallas left tackle Tyron Smith being sidelined with an injury to abuse backup Chaz Green. Ugly for the Cowboys, beautiful for the Falcons.

SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Jesse James, tight end, Pittsburgh. He made the hustle play of the year to save two points in Indianapolis. With the Steelers down 17-9 and lined up for a PAT in the third quarter, the attempt was blocked by Margus Hunt and recovered by Matthias Farley, who took off down the left sideline on his way to what appeared to be a two-point conversion for the Colts. (The defensive team can return a failed conversion after touchdown and be awarded two points.)

James began sprinting at the Colts’ 19, and he ran down the faster Farley 78 yards later, the Colts just three yards away from making this a 19-9 game. How huge was that play when the Steelers scored in the fourth quarter, then made the two-point conversion to tie the game at 17? Pretty big.

Tyler Shatley, long-snapper, Jacksonville. Never long-snapped in a game in high school. Never long-snapped in a game in college. Never long-snapped in an NFL game. But with Matt Overton out with a shoulder injury, Shatley entered and snapped for Josh Lambo’s game-tying field goal with three seconds left in the fourth quarter. Then he snapped for Lambo’s game-winning field goal in overtime. Now that’s a fairly clutch performance.

COACH OF THE WEEK

Asshole Face, head coach, New Orleans. After the Saints went 7-9 in each of the past three seasons, Payton made a conscious decision to change his explosive offense. No longer would the team be dependent on Drew Brees to keep the Saints in every game; now Payton and GM Mickey Loomis would put more pressure on the running game and the offensive line, with a maturing defense, to carry the load. Well, with a defense keeping the Saints in every game, and Brees not the offensive crutch anymore, the Saints have won seven in a row. A bold preseason move by Payton continued to pay dividends Sunday in Buffalo.

GOATS OF THE WEEK

Chaz Green, left tackle, Dallas. Allowed five of the six Adrian Clayborn sacks against the Falcons, playing in relief of Tyron Smith. A left tackle cannot play an uglier game. You just have to hope, for this young guy’s sake, that it doesn’t stick with him and mar his career.

Jack Doyle, tight end, Indianapolis. With the Colts up 17-9 with 13 minutes left against Pittsburgh, Jacoby Brissett threw an eminently catchable pass to Doyle right near the line of scrimmage. It went through Doyle’s hands and into the arms of Pittsburgh linebacker Ryan Shazier, who was tackled at the Indy 10-yard line. From there, the Steelers scored on a touchdown pass, and a Martavis Bryant two-point conversion gave them the tie, and they won on a field goal as time expired. Sort of a vital mistake by Doyle.

John Fox, coach, Chicago. Bears back Benny Cunningham was ruled down at the half-yard line in the first half against Green Bay after a 23-yard gain. Fox challenged the ruling on the field, claiming it should been a touchdown. Instead of having first-and-goal at the half-yard line, the Bears actually had a turnover. That’s because while Cunningham dove for the end zone, the ball was coming loose as he stretched for the pylon … and the ball was ruled a touchback for Green Bay.

The Bears trailed by seven at the time and never tied or led thereafter. Tough decision for Fox to make, but it turns out actually throwing the challenge flag on the play likely cost the Bears a halftime lead—and quite possibly a win in this incredibly close series. Green Bay leads all-time, 95 wins to 93, with six ties. Bizarre to think of it … but without this challenge by Fox, it might have been 94-94 this morning.

* * *

The MMQB Podcast With Peter King

This week’s conversations: Los Angeles Rams coach Sean McVay and New England receiver Julian Edelman.

* * *

Things I Think I Think

1. I think these are my quick thoughts on Week 10:

a. Catch of the year? Maurice Harris’ incredible one-elbow grab diving to the ground, holding on as he crashed to the ground, just past the right pylon, from Kirk Cousins … I have not seen a catch as good this year. Congrats to the former undrafted free agent from Cal.

b. Matthew Stafford’s touch, particularly on his deep throws, is so beautiful to see right now.

c. Interesting thing about the John Lynch-Kyle Shanahan marriage: Through the 0-9 start, I never heard one thing, not even a whisper, that one was remotely unhappy with the other. This is a solid group of coaches and front-office people (personnel veep Adam Peters is really good). The win over the Giants will be the first of many.

d. Eagles had the best bye week of any team this year. Every NFC East team lost, and now the Eagles, by virtue of sitting on their couches all day Sunday, gained a game over occasionally dangerous Dallas and Washington.

e. There are not many more physically punishing rivalry games in the NFL than Seattle-Arizona.

f. What a well-deserved honor, London Fletcher getting his jersey retired by John Carroll University. Such a good player and man.

g. Case Keenum is making it very hard for the Vikings to play Teddy Bridgewater. I know Keenum’s limitations, but watch him play in Washington, particularly early. The guy’s good. One of the throws of the day was his soft pop fly to Adam Thielen, good for 38 yards down the left sideline, in the only spot that would have been complete. Lovely. Keenum needs to work on his fade throws, though.

h. Adam Thielen on Washington linebacker Zach Brown. Gain of 37. Unfair fight right there.

i. Stefon Diggs scored his second touchdown Sunday, then leaped up and hugged the goal-post stanchion. Can’t use the goal post as a prop. Good Lord: Why?

j. You’re a good man, Drew Bledsoe. The former Patriots QB was back in Boston over the weekend to play a Veterans Day football game against a group of Wounded Warriors.

k. The speed of that Steeler front is so hard to contend.

l. Attaway Jay Glazer and Nate Boyer. This project of theirs to help returning vets is great, and not just on Veterans Day weekend.

m. Hey, Marqise Lee: What a dumb taunting foul you caused late in Jacksonville. That might have cost your team a win.

n. Hey Tre Boston: What a dumb decision, to not run back an interception in the fourth quarter for the Chargers.

o. Mike Pereira’s right: Atlanta safety Brian Pool got away with a hit on defenseless Dez Bryant early against Dallas—a foul that the officials just have to be able to see.

p. Wow, Xavier Woods. The rookie Dallas defensive back with the superb diving interception, leading to the first points of the game in Atlanta.

2. I think Vontaze Burfict has lost the benefit of the doubt with me, after yet another incident in yet another game. In the span of three plays, he got called for unnecessary roughness on a hit on Demarco Murray, then bumped an official to earn a disqualification from the game, and then, on the way off the field, he got into an argument with some emboldened female fans in the front row in Nashville. On top of being a hothead, Burfict’s got rabbit ears. Great.

3. I think this is why you simply should never, ever, ever bet on football: The Saints lost their first two games, both by double digits. They have won their last seven by 18.4 points. This team is precisely like the Rams—no fluke.

4. I think I ask this about the Los Angeles Chargers: Can any team lose games in a more agonizing fashion? Five of the six losses have been one-possession jobs, including losses by 3, 2, 2, and 3. The Chargers do some dumb things, but not enough dumb things to be as star-crossed as they are.

5. I think I bet Broncos VP John Elway goes quarterback-shopping again.It’s not just that the woeful Brock Osweiler is the quarterback for one of America’s great sports franchises. It’s the utter hopelessness of their quest over the past three weeks. The Broncos have a five-game losing streak, but, really, it’s the last 15 days that are particularly embarrassing.

They’ve lost three games by 63 points. They’ve given up 40.3 points per game, which is the real stunner. On offense, Elway has to be mulling what to do to solidify his quarterback position for 2018. He won’t go into another season wishing and hoping at quarterback. Whoever’s the GM of the Giants will get a call about Eli Manning—and should listen.

6. I think it’s cool to note that, between games in mile-high Denver on Sunday night and 1.4-mile-high Mexico City versus the Raiders next Sunday, the New England Patriots will work out this week in a city about halfway between the two in altitude: Colorado Springs, elevation: 6,035 feet. (Hat tip to Mike Reiss of ESPN for this note.)

7. I think I have three thoughts about the Jim Irsay-Andrew Luck situation:

a. Irsay’s assertion that Luck is somehow overly protective of his shoulder and not wanting to play unless he feels totally perfect, I think, is foolish. Luck played 21 games after initially injuring his throwing shoulder in September 2015.

b. I bet Colts GM Chris Ballard has moved aggressively to tamp any hard feelings that Luck might have toward his owner. In fact, I would be shocked if Ballard hasn’t done something to ameliorate the situation.

c. I do not think there’s much of a chance Luck gets dealt in the offseason, no matter how well Jacoby Brissett plays. And I love Brissett.

8. I think the Seahawks shouldn’t be alone in getting the once-over from the league office about Russell Wilson’s 3.5-second mid-game sideline exam for head trauma Thursday night. As much or more, I blame the neutral Unaffiliated Neurological Consultant on the Seattle sideline. To refresh: On every sideline during NFL games is a local head-trauma specialist. He or she has the authority to mandate an exam of the player, or take the player to the locker room for a more thorough exam.

When a player is sent to the sideline to be checked out, that neurological consultant and a team doctor must examine the player before he returns. Wilson was sent to the sidelines by referee Walt Anderson on the field, and darted around for a few seconds, never getting examined for longer than a couple of moments, and then running back on the field after missing one snap.

At the end of that series, Wilson was examined. But that’s not the proper protocol—he should have been examined more thoroughly when he first game out. That’s one of the reasons why the NFL put those medical professionals on the sidelines in the first place—to take over a situation like that and not have a coach or the quarterback himself deciding what to do.

9. I think I’m really looking forward to Greg Olsen as the third man in the FOX booth next Sunday, Rams at Vikes. I think Olsen’s one of those players who has a future in this business, and I think it’ll be really interesting to hear him dish on Sean McVay’s offense. Good idea by FOX.

NFL takes notice / Monday after

http://www.ocregister.com/2017/11/1...he-same-breath-sunday-and-its-not-crazy-talk/

The Rams and the Super Bowl were mentioned in the same breath Sunday, and it’s not crazy talk

By VINCENT BONSIGNORE

The Rams have been so bad for so long it’s understandable how the rest of the NFL might have raised a bit of a skeptical eye over the first eight games of the season.

That is, if anyone has even been paying attention to what’s been going on in Los Angeles in the first place.

The Rams winning six of their first eight games and Jared Goff emerging as a franchise-caliber quarterback and Sean McVay cooking up magical and innovative games plans to breathe a whole bunch of life into a long-morbid offense.

The skepticism was understandable, given the recent history.

But a mistake nonetheless.

So let’s just consider what unfolded on Sunday in their 33-7 victory over the Houston Texans a very necessary and very powerful heads up.

The Rams are officially a problem for the rest of the NFL.

And not just as a potential playoff contender or division champion problem, either.

The Rams are a bona fide Super Bowl contender.

They aren’t just walking the walk, either. They’re talking the talk.

“For sure,” declared All-Pro defensive tackle Aaron Donald when asked if the Rams had it in them to make a run to the Super Bowl.

To understand why or how such a crazy proposition is even being contemplated nine games into the season, you simply had to witness the way the Rams flicked off a sluggish first half like so much lint on a sports jacket, only to come out roaring in the third quarter by dropping a 21-0 hammer on the Texans.

Good teams don’t do that.

At least not with the precision and savagery the Rams did while pummeling the poor Texans with a flurry of quick and decisive second-half punches.

Great teams do.

And the Rams are awakening as nothing less than one of the elite teams in the NFL.

They played their worst first offensive half of the season on Sunday. Partly due to the Texans defensive tenacity and approach, and partially due to uncharacteristic unforced errors.

They didn’t panic. They didn’t fret. They weren’t even particularly worried.

They simply gathered themselves at halftime and promised to calm down and eliminate the self-inflicted wounds.

“It wasn’t really adjustments,” said guard Jamon Brown. “It was more like, we just need to grab our poise. There were some mistakes we made early on, it kind of rattled us, but the coaches came in and got everyone together, told everyone to just stay poised and just do what we do.”

And then they proceeded to waylay the Texans.

“We’re a group that, when we face adversity, we don’t blink,” said center John Sullivan.

They just regroup, reset and come out slugging.

“It’s all confidence, momentum.” said Goff. “And we know at some point it’s going to pop. And in the second half, it did.”

It would be a thing of beauty if it weren’t so damned scary.

Goff had 104 yards passing in the first half with zero touchdowns. He finished with a career high 355 yards and three touchdowns, including a back-breaking 94-yard touchdown throw to Robert Woods that punished the Texans for continually stacking the line of scrimmage with defenders.

“When you commit as many guys as they did to the box it usually it ends up burning you,” Sullivan said. “And they got burned on the 94-yard touchdown to Robert.”

Woods’ long touchdown early in the third quarter did more than stake the Rams to a 16-7 lead and create a little breathing room. It literally uncaged the most powerful offense in the NFL on the Texans.

Coupled with a defense that’s given up just 24 points over the past three games – and just a lone first-half touchdown to the Texans – the Rams turned a close game into a laugher in a matter of minutes.

Where they had been sluggish and indecisive and out of rhythm over the first two quarters, all of a sudden it was back to being the powerful, explosive offensive that’s been running opponents off the field the last two months.

“The guys just stayed together and just kept competing and worried about the next snap because that’s the only thing we can control is what’s next,” McVay said.

On a day where nothing came easy over the first 30 minutes, only to walk off the field at the Coliseum with a blowout win is a startling reminder just how potent the Rams have become.

“To feel like we did offensively, not feeling like we played our best or to the level we know we can, yet to look up and see 33 points it definitely gives you a lot of confidence,” said Brown.

It’s one thing to even have the kind of hammer the Rams are wielding these days.

It’s another thing altogether to know how to use it.

The Rams are in select company in that regard.

“We’re playing with confidence right now, and that’s a good place to be,” Goff said.

There’s still a long way to go.

But the Rams are legitimate Super Bowl contenders.

Jared Goff Continues To Keep Company With Kurt Warner

http://www.espn.com/blog/los-angele...ff-continues-to-keep-company-with-kurt-warner

By: Alden Gonzalez

LOS ANGELES -- Jared Goff's California cool came through at halftime, while briefly, calmly addressing the rest of the Los Angeles Rams' offense in the locker room on Sunday afternoon.

"We're fine," he told them. "Don't freak out."

The Rams, suddenly accustomed to scoring with ease, had managed only three field goals in 30 minutes against the lowly, injury-riddled Houston Texans. But Goff anticipated a turnaround. His offense had been too good -- he had been too good -- to suspect otherwise. Then he marched back onto the field and executed to perfection in what became a 33-7 triumph, the Rams' seventh win in a span of nine games.

In the third quarter alone, Goff threw for 204 yards and three touchdowns. By the end of it, he joined the New England Patriots' Tom Brady and the Kansas City Chiefs' Alex Smith as the only players to post multiple games with at least 300 passing yards, three touchdowns and zero interceptions. Goff is the only player in franchise history to put up those numbers in back-to-back games.

Jared Goff threw for a career best 355 yards in the win over the Texans. Chris Williams/Icon Sportswire

Rams head coach Sean McVay continues to be impressed by Goff's "mental toughness," a character trait that became apparent to him the very first time he sat down with the starting quarterback.

"I put him in some bad spots, and I thought he just stayed together, stayed the course, didn't let whatever the previous plays that didn't work out for us affect his ability to move forward," McVay said. "And that's what he's done a really good job of throughout the course of the first nine games now. He's a mentally tough guy that's unfazed by the good or the bad."

The good is most prevalent now. Over his past three games, a stretch when his Rams have won by a combined 93 points, Goff is 61-of-96 for 901 yards, eight touchdowns and one interception. He entered Sunday ranked 10th in the NFL in Total QBR, then went 25-of-37 for a career-high 355 yards, three touchdowns and, for the sixth time in nine games, zero interceptions.

And he keeps getting better in the places he is weakest, specifically when pressured and while throwing deep.

All three of Goff's touchdown passes, off play action, came against the Texans' blitz, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. All told, Goff threw 12 passes against the blitz. He completed 75 percent of them and averaged 15.4 yards per attempt, after completing 56.1 percent of his passes and averaging 8.7 yards per attempt against the blitz in his previous eight games.

Goff entered completing only 46.2 percent of passes that traveled more than 10 yards downfield, ranked 24th in the NFL. He then went 0-for-4 on such throws in the first half, but 3-for-3 in the second half. The biggest was a 94-yard touchdown pass to Robert Woods, seven days after a 67-yard touchdown pass to Sammy Watkins. Goff now has four passing touchdowns of 50-plus yards this season, the most by a Rams player since Kurt Warner totaled seven in 2000.

With each passing week, McVay sees Goff's decision-making continue to grow.

"He continues to gain a grasp of exactly what we're trying to get done -- the intent of the playcalls, being that extension of the coaching staff," McVay said. "You feel very comfortable and confident to be able to put the game in his hands, and he's shown why."

Goff's 16 passing touchdowns this season are the most by a Rams quarterback through the first nine games since Warner had 17 in 2001, the year he won the MVP. Goff is only 23, coming off a disastrous rookie season while operating within what increasingly feels like an antiquated, talent-deprived offense. But he's on pace for 4,240 passing yards and has thrown 12 more touchdowns than interceptions.

The opponents will get tougher now, with the Minnesota Vikings, New Orleans Saints, Seattle Seahawks, Tennessee Titans and Philadelphia Eagles all on tap.

But each week, it seems, the game slows down just a little bit more for Goff, and his belief grows with it.

"Any time you come into a next level of any sport, it does take some years to let it slow down, some experience, and it's continued to do that," Goff said. "I'm continuing to see things better and see more and be able to understand more and more. I think it's a credit to the coaching staff and the way they've handled not only myself, but the whole offense the whole year. Right now we're in a good spot."

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