A New Rams Mentality Led to Their Win Over the Seahawks/Stalter

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RamBill

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A New Rams Mentality Led to Their Win Over the Seahawks
Posted by: Anthony Stalter

http://www.101sports.com/2015/09/15/a-new-rams-mentality-led-to-their-win-over-the-seahawks/

Rams linebacker James Laurinaitis told me something in training camp this year that stuck with me through the end of the Rams’ thrilling 34-31 win over the Seahawks in overtime on Sunday.
foles strip

Seahawks CB Cary Williams forces a fumble from Rams QB Nick Foles in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game. Williams returned the ball for a touchdown.

The Rams were coming off an ugly performance against the Titans (their second preseason loss in as many weeks), and I had asked Laurinaitis about a specific defensive miscue that led to a big run by Tennessee.

After Laurinaitis broke down what happened on the play, he followed with a statement that wound up being revealing in wake of what happened at the Dome on Sunday.

“Those are the things we have to eliminate.” Laurinaitis said about the long run.

“But what I like about our team is that a couple of years ago it would have been, ‘Oh it’s just the preseason, we’ll be all right.’

“[This year] everyone is pissed off about [the mistakes]. That’s good. You want guys to not accept it at any point, whether it’s practice or not. I like our mentality.”

On Sunday you could feel the air sucked out of the Dome after Seattle cornerback Cary Williams scored a go-ahead touchdown following a sack/strip/fumble recovery of a Nick Foles’ pass attempt. Defeat was in the air and it was pungent, especially for a crowd all too familiar with the aroma.

Williams’ touchdown was only the exclamation point, the result of a situation that had been unfolding since the start of the fourth quarter. The tipping point actually occurred 10 minutes prior to Williams’ score.
Seahawks TE Jimmy Graham hauls in a TD pass in the fourth quarter of Sunday's game.

Seahawks TE Jimmy Graham hauls in a TD pass in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game.

On the first play of the fourth quarter, Marshawn Lynch took a handoff while standing in the backfield next to Wilson, who was in a shotgun formation. Lynch burst through the left side of the Rams’ defense for 24 yards.

On that play, somehow a gap was left wide open after the snap, and Lynch took advantage by setting up Seattle with a first-and-10 at the St. Louis 30-yard-line. Michael Brockers admitted following the game that he didn’t play his assignment properly, although there was no linebacker to cover the gap either.

That play was symptomatic of what Laurinaitis was talking about in training camp:

An easy mistake that proved costly for the Rams. If that gap is accounted for like it should have been, Lynch wouldn’t have gained anywhere near 24 yards. It was one of those subtle slipup that has plagued the Rams in years past.

The Seahawks capped that drive off with a Jimmy Graham seven-yard touchdown pass from Russell Wilson, followed by a Lynch two-point conversion to cut the Rams’ lead down to three. Now St. Louis’ lead was down to three at 24-21.

What happened next is something Rams fans have unfortunately become accustomed to over the years.

Five plays into a 57-yard drive that reached the Seattle 28-yard-line, Isaiah Pead fumbled after a hard-fought six-yard run (which was kind of a microcosm of Pead’s four-year career in St. Louis). The Seahawks turned the gift into a field goal to tie the game at 24-all.

Then came the Williams touchdown. And nausea for Rams fans.

The familiar “Same old Rams” tune started to warm up at the Dome. It began as a low hum then escalated as Foles and Co. faced a third-and-15 from the St. Louis 37-yard-line needing a touchdown to tie.

To harken back to what Laurinaitis said in training camp, everyone was pissed off. Only this time it wasn’t just the fans.

Foles rolled to his right while keeping his eyes downfield and hit Kenny Britt for a 21-yard completion as Earl Thomas trailed in coverage.

Three plays later, Kam Chancellor’s replacement, Dion Bailey, slipped as Lance Kendricks hauled in a 37-yard touchdown pass from Foles to tie the game.
Rams receivers Tavon Austin and Kenny Britt celebrate Austin's 75-yard punt return for a touchdown in Sunday's game.

Rams receivers Tavon Austin and Kenny Britt celebrate Austin’s 75-yard punt return for a touchdown in Sunday’s game.

Foles also made a perfect throw when he dropped a 22-yard completion into Stedman Bailey’s arms to set up what eventually would become the Rams’ game-winning field goal in overtime.

The throw wasn’t just impressive due to its degree of difficulty, but also because it came with Richard Sherman trailing Bailey in coverage, and Thomas emerging to help over the top. Not that anyone needs a reminder, but Sherman and Thomas are two of the best in the league at their respective positions.

Suddenly, there was a different feel inside the dome. You got the sense not that the Rams could win the game, but that they were supposed to.

Brockers often doesn’t receive the recognition that he deserves, but that’s going to happen when you play alongside Aaron Donald and Robert Quinn. But Brockers made perhaps the play of the game when he walked right tackle Garry Gilliam back into the Seattle backfield and then combined with Donald to bring down Lynch to save the game on fourth-and-one attempt.

It was the same look that the Seahawks gave the Rams earlier in the game when Lynch ran for 24 yards. Only this time, Brockers corrected his mistake and played his assignment perfectly.

Speaking of Donald, he threw left guard Justin Britt to the side to help wrap Lynch up on the play. Both Britt and JR Sweezy might want to avoid film after the way Donald abused them throughout the game.

(Side note: I’ll need to devote an entire column to what the Rams’ defensive line did on Sunday. There’s just not enough space to get into how much they affected the game.)

In the end, Foles reminded fans what it’s like to have a starting quarterback under center with the game on the line.

When he wasn’t owning whichever lineman was in front of him in one-on-one matchups, Donald was freeing up Quinn, William Hayes, Chris Long and Eugene Sims to create havoc when Seattle double-teamed him.

Benny Cunningham was easily the most underrated player on the field, gaining yards after contact and emerging as a weapon as opposed to a liability with Todd Gurley and Tre Mason sidelined.

Tavon Austin had a direct impact on the final score with two touchdowns (one rushing, one on a punt return).

Britt, Bailey, Kendricks and Jared Cook all had big catches in significant moments.

Before suffering a concussion, Trumaine Johnson made one of the more athletic interceptions you’ll see when he jumped a Wilson pass attempt to Lynch in the second quarter. His replacement when he left the game, Marcus Roberson, also held his own and joined a Rams secondary that received contributions from Lamarcus Joyner and Mark Barron.

Same old Rams? Not this week.

Time will tell if the tides have turned. For now, the Rams are 1-0 and fans can appreciate the effort displayed by both the players and coaching staff on Sunday.

As Laurinaitis pointed out to me in camp, this team has a different mentality then it did a couple of years ago. Mistakes won’t be tolerated. Hopefully, neither will losing.
 

Ballhawk

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Could this explain the lower than normal penalty count? It was wonderful to see them avoiding their normal self destructive ways.
 

Prime Time

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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2015/09/16/michael-brockers-knew-game-deciding-play-was-a-run/

Michael Brockers knew game-deciding play was going to be a run
Posted by Mike Florio on September 16, 2015

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AP

So how did the Rams stop the Seahawks on fourth down in overtime on Sunday? According to defensive tackle Michael Brockers, it helped that they knew a run was coming.

“It was probably in the third quarter I seen that same formation before, and I got out of my gap and they got about three yards,” Brockers explained during Wednesday’s PFT Live on NBC Sports Radio. “So we called a call that we had been practicing on all week against that formation, and I told coach to trust me and call it again, don’t can it and let me get my redemption back on that play and make it up for the team.

So he called it, I was ready, I was like, ‘OK, I see this formation, I know what they’re gonna do,’ and when [Russell Wilson] handed the ball to Marshawn Lynch I was in the backfield, and me and Aaron [Donald] took him down to the ground.”

How did Brockers know the run was coming?

“[W]e pick up on tendencies, and when you see Marshawn probably a yard or two behind Russell and you just know that zone read scheme that they do is coming,” Brockers said. “I knocked the tackle back in the backfield so he didn’t have anywhere to go and wrapped [Lynch’s] legs up so he couldn’t keep those things going, because if you don’t he can get that yard. So we just did a great job. We did our job on that play and I think it all came out at the end.”

The penetration from Brockers forced Lynch to actually stop. By the time he got started again, Donald was on top of Lynch. And getting he job done was easier because the Seattle offensive line isn’t what it used to be.

“It’s very makeshift,” Brockers said. “You have a lot of guys who aren’t playing positions they they started when they came into the league. Like you have [J.R.] Sweezy who also was a really good guard in this league and he used to be a defensive tackle.

[Justin] Britt who played tackle last year has now moved to guard, so you got a lot of people who aren’t playing a position that they started with or playing a new position and when you got things like that, you know, you got great defensive linemen I feel like we have, you have to take advantage of that. And we came out got six sacks and we got a lot of pressure on Wilson.”

Here’s the part that should concern the Seahawks going forward.

“We tried to make them one dimensional,” Brockers said. “You try to take away the run game and make them pass and they played right into our hands.”

With a quarterback making more than $20 million per year, the idea that an opposing defense would try to beat his team by forcing him to do what quarterbacks are paid to do is a little alarming. The question is whether other teams will be able to make Seattle one dimensional — and whether the Seahawks will be able to win with Wilson throwing more than 40 passes per game.
 

Mackeyser

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Remember what we did to Denver last year?

Our D put a hurt on that vaunted O and really the biggest takeaway is that we essentially published the blueprint for how to defeat the Broncos. And, if you look at teams that beat them, they used our blueprint and even acknowledged us.

It wouldn't surprise me at all if this game leads to something like that.
 

hotanez

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One thing I noticed early in the game was what Seattle was doing after the whistle. They were pushing and mouthing off looking for a reaction from the Rams. I was very happy that they kept their cool and didn't do something stupid that would cost them the game. This team is really growing up and playing smart.
 

Rmfnlt

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One thing I noticed early in the game was what Seattle was doing after the whistle. They were pushing and mouthing off looking for a reaction from the Rams. I was very happy that they kept their cool and didn't do something stupid that would cost them the game. This team is really growing up and playing smart.
I really hope so... it seemed far too easy for opponents to "get in their heads" and next thing you know, personal foul penalties are being assessed and the game is out of control.

Loved how they kep their composure Sunday and the penalties didn't hurt them nearly as much as they have in the past. Austin's return and no flags? A beautiful thing to behold!!

So, we'll see if they can continue resisting the urge to react to opponents head games.

Think about this... if they hadn't lost the TO battle and, considering the reduction in penalties (especially ill timed ones)... I'd guess they win that game going away.