Can the Undefeated Rams Really Make a Run at 16-0?

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https://www.theringer.com/nfl/2018/10/29/18038634/los-angeles-rams-chances-going-undefeated

Can the Undefeated Rams Really Make a Run at 16-0?
Sean McVay’s team is overflowing with talent, and pulled out a tough win over the Packers to improve to 8-0. At the midway point of the NFL season, it’s time to examine whether the league’s best team has a chance at perfection.
By Robert Mays

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AP Images/Ringer illustration

Before we get too far down this path, let’s all agree that the Rams’ chances of going undefeated this season are slim at best. That’s not a knock against them; the team sits at 8-0 after a 29-27 nail-biter win over the Packers on Sunday, in which Todd Gurley racked up 195 yards from scrimmage and Aaron Donald looked unstoppable.

It’s just that it’s nearly impossible for any team to go undefeated in the NFL, especially one that faces a second-half schedule like the Rams’. The emotional toll and pressure of an undefeated run, combined with the drive each opponent has to hand the team its first loss, makes it a treacherous road. There’s a reason the ’72 Dolphins get to pop champagne once a year.

But the halfway mark of the season feels like a natural point to start discussing the possibility of the Rams going 16-0. And before writing off their chances, it’s worth examining the specific reasons why this particular team can—or can’t—win out the rest of the way.

Let’s start with the marks in their favor. The margin of victory against the Packers may have been only two points, but it was yet another game in which the Rams took control during the second half. Three of their past four victories have been by three points or fewer, but in two of those wins (over the Broncos and Packers), the Rams held a double-digit lead at some point in the second half.

The only win that required a fourth-quarter comeback was their Week 5 victory against Seattle. Their season-long point differential is plus-109; no other team in the league is above plus-85 (the Chiefs). This team isn’t happening upon victories.

Over the past month, the Rams have also been winning games when their play hasn’t been spotless. Todd Gurley finished with 114 yards on the ground against Green Bay, but it took 25 carries to get there. Jared Goff threw three touchdown passes, but consistent pressure from the Packers defense hurt the overall efficiency of L.A.’s passing game. The Rams continue to have issues in the secondary (which we’ll get to); it’s safe to pencil in at least one broken-coverage touchdown per game against them.

Yet even on a day when L.A. looks far from perfect, it still has enough talent to pull out wins against quality opponents. Gurley supplemented an unremarkable day on the ground with 81 receiving yards, including a spectacular catch off a tipped pass along the left sideline.

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John McCoy/Getty Images

Typically, much of Gurley’s pass-catching production comes on screen passes that need plenty of open field to develop, but against Green Bay, he did most of his damage running routes from all over the formation. Goff completed just 54.3 percent of his passes, but the Rams were able to gain yardage from chunk plays.

Four different receivers hauled in passes of at least 20 yards. The Titans have 11 such plays on the season. (The Rams lead the league with 40.) And Sunday saw a lack of pass protection from a team that typically does an excellent job insulating its quarterback; the Rams gave up five sacks and still pulled out a win.

It also helps that the Rams boast the league’s best pass rusher. After a slow start to the season in sack production, Aaron Donald has been on an outrageous tear over his past five games. He sacked Aaron Rodgers twice Sunday, bringing his season total to 10 and putting him on pace for 20 sacks.

Only seven interior players have ever finished a season with 15 or more, and only two of them—Reggie White and Robert Porcher—were full-time defensive tackles in the same way that Donald is. He is playing at an astounding level right now, and he’s good for one or two game-changing plays per outing.

The issue for the Rams is that, with the way their cornerbacks are playing, those plays are going to be necessary every week. When he was in Kansas City, Marcus Peters’s high-risk play rewarded the Chiefs with plenty of turnovers. But he’s played hurt for most of this season, and those positive plays have disappeared. He’s a liability for the Rams right now, and, with Aqib Talib still sidelined after ankle surgery, replacement cornerback Troy Hill is a concern as well.

The defense has had to rely on a few scattered Donald sacks and other creative means of getting pressure because of its struggles in the secondary and lack of edge-rushing talent. For all the fawning over the Rams’ unblemished start, Rodgers should have had one final drive to win Sunday’s game. If Ty Montgomery hadn’t fumbled after inexplicably bringing a kickoff out of the end zone in the fourth quarter, there’s a chance that this entire conversation would have been moot.

That’s where the real concern about the possibility for 16-0 creeps in. Beating teams like the Packers week in and week out just isn’t easy, and, unfortunately, Green Bay is a worse squad than many of the clubs the Rams will face in the second half of the season. L.A.’s next six games include matchups with the Saints (on the road), the Seahawks (with a red-hot Russell Wilson), the Chiefs (in Mexico City—oh boy, will that be fun), the Bears (in Chicago), and the Eagles (who may have found their groove by mid-December). That is a perilous stretch.

You don’t even have to look past next week to talk yourself into a Rams loss. Drew Brees and Co. should have an easy time picking apart those cornerbacks, and Donald isn’t likely to have same the impact against the Saints offensive line that he does against other units. With guard Andrus Peat back in the fold, New Orleans has one of the most complete pass-blocking lines in football.

Brees is also getting rid of the ball in 2.38 seconds on average, tied for the sixth-quickest time in the league, according to Pro Football Focus. Even for the best team in football, this is a bad matchup in a historically tough road environment. It’s not hard to imagine the Rams offense scoring 40 points against the Saints, but it’s just as easy to see New Orleans turning the game into a shoot-out that favors whichever quarterback gets the ball last.

And therein lies the problem with going undefeated while playing a first-place schedule. Facing such a daunting regular season, Sean McVay may not even care about going undefeated. The head coach rested his starters in Week 17 a season ago, something he may decide to do again this year, and, considering the Rams lost in the first round of last season’s playoffs, his sights are almost certainly set on an extended playoff run than a flash-in-the-pan regular season.

The Rams are the NFC favorites through half a season, and by many metrics they’ve been the best team in the league. But there’s a difference between being the league’s best team and one that has a real chance of pulling off what only two teams in NFL history have done. The Rams’ road to 16-0 may not be realistic, but their road to the Super Bowl has already started coming into view.
 

Jacobarch

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I personally don't want to go 16-0. I think we need to lose a game or two to become a better more complete team. I know McVay's "one game at a time" speech has worked until this point but there will come a point in the season where guys lower their guard because of their success. Happens in every profession,
 

tklongball

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I personally don't want to go 16-0. I think we need to lose a game or two to become a better more complete team. I know McVay's "one game at a time" speech has worked until this point but there will come a point in the season where guys lower their guard because of their success. Happens in every profession,
Agree, I think going into the playoffs at 15-1 has a lot less pressure than going in at 16-0. However, I would quite enjoy going in at 16-0. LOL
 

Picked4td

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He might have meant losing at the start of the 4th. Having a lead change or 2 in the 4th isn’t exactly a 4th quarter comeback
 

Legatron4

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I think we end up going 14-2, with the first loss coming this weekend, unfortunately.
Agreed. As much as I don’t want to lose to that smug fuck Payton, it’s just too difficult to win every game. Panthers went 15-1 in 2015 and nobody remembers because they lost to the 12-4 Broncos.
 

Loyal

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Inconsistencies in reasoning:
1. Author talks up the Rams opponents. "Hot" Seahawks. Mismatch with Brees Saints in the Dome.
2. How good is the Rams record on the road?
3. Will Kupp be back in New Orleans? If so, we are not losing to them.
4. When will Talib be back? I hope after the bye.
5. The 8-0 should have nothing to do with individual upcoming games.
Each game is its own . Take a coin flip where the past 9 flips are "heads."
The tenth flips is still a 50/50 proposition and is not affected by the previous 9 results.
6. Aaron Freakin' Donald and Todd Gurley...nuff said.
 

LesBaker

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Agree, I think going into the playoffs at 15-1 has a lot less pressure than going in at 16-0. However, I would quite enjoy going in at 16-0. LOL

The stress would kill me LOL.

But 15-1 teams of which there are 3, have never made it to the SB.

He might have meant losing at the start of the 4th. Having a lead change or 2 in the 4th isn’t exactly a 4th quarter comeback

If you are trailing in the 4th and your team overcomes the deficit it counts as a 4th quarter comeback from what I have heard.
 

TexasRam

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I have us losing to the Saints in New Orleans.

but the Saints schedule is Brutual.

We WILL get the #1 seed.

We WILL get Talib and Kupp healthy.

We WILL beat the Saints in Los Angeles in the NFC Championship game.

The Goal is not 16-0.

This is the end goal folks..

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Loyal

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I have us losing to the Saints in New Orleans.

but the Saints schedule is Brutual.

We WILL get the #1 seed.

We WILL get Talib and Kupp healthy.

We WILL beat the Saints in Los Angeles in the NFC Championship game.

The Goal is not 16-0.

This is the end goal folks..

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Never said that, except as a goal before the ultimate goal....19-0
 

Mackeyser

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I personally don't want to go 16-0. I think we need to lose a game or two to become a better more complete team. I know McVay's "one game at a time" speech has worked until this point but there will come a point in the season where guys lower their guard because of their success. Happens in every profession,

I've never been around a team as a fan that's more dialed in to the team dynamic and really focusing on one game at at time.

You can't even get the guys to talk beyond the next game. Some guys purposefully don't know the schedule beyond the next game off the top of their heads.

We don't need to lose a game to understand anything.

We've won tough games for the last 4 weeks including slamming a 9ers team that almost beat this Packers team.

When we win in NO, more and more people will start to understand.
 

RamFan503

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Sorry but I have us thumping the Aints due to what they pulled in the pre-season game. Say what you will about trying things in the pre-season but I saw a couple times when McVay was obviously saying to himself, “what the fuck?” And a couple of the players - AD being one of them - shaking his head at the crap Payton pulled. I’m thinking the Rams come in and lay waste to the talk of NO taking us down and use this as a statement game making NO once AGAIN our bitches.
 

Memento

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I honestly think that they can make a run at 19-0. This is the best team in the NFL by far. Balanced offense and defense, great special teams, star players on all sides of the ball...this is a special team, guys.
 

Mackeyser

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Sorry but I have us thumping the Aints due to what they pulled in the pre-season game. Say what you will about trying things in the pre-season but I saw a couple times when McVay was obviously saying to himself, “what the freak?” And a couple of the players - AD being one of them - shaking his head at the crap Payton pulled. I’m thinking the Rams come in and lay waste to the talk of NO taking us down and use this as a statement game making NO once AGAIN our bitches.

They won't say boo about it to reporters, but I'd bet real money that the preseason comes up in the building more than once.

Aaron Donald is like Bruce Banner... "don't make me angry. You wouldn't like me when I'm angry..."
 

jrry32

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Is it possible? Yes. Will it happen? No.
 

RamsAndEwe

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I'll ponder undefeated during Bye Week. The Saints got me nervous, yet McVay's Rams travel well.

How do I really feel? By the forth quarter our Rams resurrect A'ints and those brown "paper bags" A'int fans used to wear.
 
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