Excellent article explaining what went wrong yesterday

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thirteen28

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This article absolutely encapsulates why I believe the lion's share of the blame for the Rams offensive woes yesterday fall on McVay's shoulders. Now please note - I am not giving Goff a pass for his bad play. Nor am I giving any of the pass catchers slack for not getting open or hanging onto balls that hit them in the hands. And I'm not excusing the OL for their poor job pass blocking yesterday, nor the RB's for their failures on blitz pickup.

But evidence presented here clearly indicates, McVay chose to attack the strength of the Dolphins defense, rather than their weakness. We can speculate as to why, but in the end, his plan failed and failed spectacularly.

McVay is a smart guy, but he has to stop being so stubborn and adjust to the reality before him. That reality is that, while the Rams have the talent to be a good offense, maybe even very good, they don't have the talent to be an elite offense, as they were in 2017-18. While our OL is better than it was last year, it's not where it was during those two years, when it was easily a top 5 unit. During all of 2017 and the first 2/3 of 2018, we had an elite RB at the top of his game who could kill you in both the passing game and the running game. And we had at least one true deep threat on the outside both of those years. In 2020, we have a good OL, but it's not elite. While I certainly like our RB's, nobody can say they are equivalent to Gurley of 2017 and 2018 weeks 1-11. Our receivers are all very technically sound, but none of them is really a deep threat (well, maybe Jefferson, but that's a big if).

Accordingly, the margin for error with McVay is lower. In 2017 and the first 2/3 of 2018, he might have gotten away with this, as the Rams had the talent all across the offense to impose their will on other defenses, even good ones. We don't have that now, but what we do have is good enough talent that if McVay comes up with a solid game plan that exploits the opponent's weaknesses on D, as most teams have, we will win most of our games, and we won't give away games like yesterday.

Anyway, onto the article.


There's no reason the Rams should've thrown it 61 times vs. Miami

For the most part this season, the Los Angeles Rams offense has remained fairly well-balanced. Through the first seven games of the season, Jared Goff never attempted more than 38 passes in a game. The Rams were running the ball more than just about every team in the NFL, and were doing so successfully with Darrell Henderson leading the charge.


Then Week 8 hit and that balance went out the window. Sean McVay went back to his old ways of leaning heavily on the arm of his quarterback, which got the Rams in trouble often last season.

Goff threw the ball 61 times against the Dolphins, with the Rams running it 29 times. Now, 29 rush attempts still seems like a lot, but considering they got off 92 plays, the balance simply wasn’t there.

And when looking at the team they were facing, there’s no reason the Rams should’ve thrown the ball 61 times.

Coming into Sunday’s matchup, the Dolphins ranked 30th in yards per carry allowed. They were giving up 5.0 yards per rush attempt, getting gashed regularly on the ground. The strength of Miami’s defense is in the secondary where Byron Jones and Xavien Howard comprise arguably the best cornerback tandem in the NFL, both ranking in the top 11 in completion percentage allowed.

Add in the fact that the Dolphins blitz the fifth-most in the NFL
, and all signs pointed to this game being a ground-and-pound effort by the Rams. But again, McVay had other plans.

It’s easy to say, “But the Rams were down by 21 points in the first half.” Well, it was the passing game that dug them that hole, with Goff committing four turnovers on plays where he was under pressure almost immediately.

And it’s not as if the Rams weren’t having success on the ground. Henderson was averaging 5.9 yards per carry before getting injured. Malcolm Brown had 40 yards on 10 attempts, and Cam Akers looked good on his nine carries for 35 yards.


What made matters worse was how quickly McVay abandoned the run after it seemed to get going. Henderson opened the game with back-to-back carries of 4 yards. After that, McVay called three straight passes, all of which fell incomplete.

On the third drive, Henderson gained 18 yards on the first play. He didn’t touch the ball again on that possession. Brown took over and had a 6-yard run on first down, but McVay once again called two straight passing plays that both fell incomplete and ended the drive.

There were only four instances where the Rams ran the ball on back-to-back plays. And each of those times, Henderson or Akers kept the offense ahead of the sticks with runs of at least 4 yards every time.

Henderson had back-to-back runs of 4 yards to open the game. Later on in the first, he had runs of 4 yards and 7 yards on consecutive plays. In the second quarter, Akers had consecutive runs of 10 yards and 5 yards, then in the fourth quarter, he went for 4 yards and 5 yards on back-to-back plays, which was followed by a 2-yard run on third-and-1.

Again, you could say the Rams were playing from behind for most of the game, but had they stuck with the run early on instead of trusting Goff to beat zero-coverage blitzes every time, they probably wouldn’t have dug such a deep hole.

McVay’s refusal to trust the running game has become a gripe of Rams fans everywhere, especially given how well the team has run the ball this season. Early in the season, it looked like the ground game would be their identity. But recently, he’s abandoned the rushing attack and once again gotten off-balance.

Hopefully he recognizes this trend during the Week 9 bye.
 

TexasRam

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For the most part I agree Mcvay should have ran more. But 61 passes are because the last several possessions Miami was giving up the short pass and we were against the clock, so the numbers are slanted.

Mcvay should have used timeouts early and reoriented the offense to adjust to the zero blitz. He failed.

Mcvay got his ass kicked and he admitted it. But he will learn from it and it’s better now then in the playoffs when it matters.
 

thirteen28

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For the most part I agree Mcvay should have ran more. But 61 passes are because the last several possessions Miami was giving up the short pass and we were against the clock, so the numbers are slanted.

Mcvay should have used timeouts early and reoriented the offense to adjust to the zero blitz. He failed.

Mcvay got his ass kicked and he admitted it. But he will learn from it and it’s better now then in the playoffs when it matters.

I get that it's slanted because of the last several possessions, but it's that way because of his failure to stick with the run on various drives. I sincerely hope he does learn from it. I think had he ran more and stuck with it in the drives mentioned in the article, it would have eventually forced the Dolphins out of their defensive gameplan. This would have been a great game to run, use a lot of 12 personnel, run and play field position. It's not like the Dolphins offense was going to do anything, and sure enough they didn't.
 

Steve808

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it just sucks to lose when the other team had less than 200 yards of offense and we had a 7-0 lead.
 

CGI_Ram

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It’s exceptionally sucky carrying a loss like this thru the bye week.

Wish we had a game this week to wash this one away. :woozy:
 

TexasRam

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I get that it's slanted because of the last several possessions, but it's that way because of his failure to stick with the run on various drives. I sincerely hope he does learn from it. I think had he ran more and stuck with it in the drives mentioned in the article, it would have eventually forced the Dolphins out of their defensive gameplan. This would have been a great game to run, use a lot of 12 personnel, run and play field position. It's not like the Dolphins offense was going to do anything, and sure enough they didn't.

I agree on that. Should have never got away from the run earlier on.
 

Faceplant

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It was also 90* out there. Why not grind down their defense? I will never understand that game. Not in a million years.
 

Fatboy

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It was also 90* out there. Why not grind down their defense? I will never understand that game. Not in a million years.
That's the reason you use the running game so they are gassed in the 4th quarter ! -- the Fatboy
 

Soul Surfer

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It’s exceptionally sucky carrying a loss like this thru the bye week.

Wish we had a game this week to wash this one away. :woozy:
I think they all need to go in to the bye week with the mentality that we can either pick it up from here and do better on coaching, game planning, game calling, execution, excetera or we can have another 9-7 year and miss the playoffs.

I think we have the talent to make the playoffs but we definitely need to do a better job at game planning and game calling in particular.
 

fanotodd

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Aside from the horrific STs play (again), every time I see a game like this I think of how the 9ers minimize our defense—short drops/quick passes. And those passes are not always screens or quick outs. Living like that is dangerous. There should’ve been a pick six in that game because of all of those stupid plays.
 

madrid311

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mcvay knowing better and next time he will do better is getting old. he hasn't changed yet because he can't.
 

den-the-coach

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We all love McVay and he's not giving up the play calling, Reid still calls plays, Payton & Shanahan for example, but the article is on point and one of the areas of opportunity for Coach McVay was, he was never very patient with the run and becomes predictable, run, pass, pass.

I look at it like a bacon & eggs breakfast, the chicken is involved, but the pig is committed. McVay needs to commit more to the run, that and next year replace John Bonamego as special teams coach.
 

Ramlock

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Funny thing is, if you hit 2 passes against that sold out, 0 defense, you burn that ass big time.

But McVay’s strategy was questionable and I’m OK thinking Goff has to be better, can and will be better.
 

FrantikRam

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So answer me these two questions:

If the worst defense in NFL history put 11 guys at the line of scrimmage, should you run or pass? Just because s team has a weakness doesn't mean they can't adjust to your offense specifically.

Generally speaking, if you have a good QB and good WRs and every WR was single covered, should you run or pass? For me it's pass on every play, and it looked like McVay agreed. Zero blitzing that much is disrespectful - they're saying your QB and WRs can't beat us. There is NO WAY that Goff and McVay didn't talk on the sidelines - which puts this on Goff.

McVay is only taking the blame publicly because that's what good leaders do.

The fact that we would cite an article about him throwing 61 times when we were down by 18 at half is sketchy.
 

KNUCKLEHEAD

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Maybe an instance of the ol' I know that they know that I know that they know what's coming school of thought? Who knows?
 

RamDino

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If I recall correctly, the Rams were around a 50% pass/run rate before this game. This game was just an outlier. What needs to happen, however, is that McVay AND Goff need to figure this out. There were plays to be made out there and Goff wasn't even looking. Kurt Warner was "dumbfounded" that the RAMS could not figure out the "blitz 0" defense, but he did not blame coach or qb... he just said THE TEAM needs to come up with a plan, which McVay said they had. Someone mentioned it earlier... McVay can help by calling a timeout in that situation, but it is ultimately up to Goff to "read it" and react. We will soon see how this plays out, this is a copycat league, so the Rams will see more blitzing defenses in the future. Well see how Goff handles it, but I'm betting they will figure this out.
 

dang

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If it smells like S#*! and it looks like S#*! and it tastes like S#*! It’s S#*! The Rams passing game plan and execution for a half was pure S#*! It will never be that bad again as long as we have McVay and Goff. They need to Figure out what happened, lock it into memory and never let it happen again.
 

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Mcvay should have used timeouts early and reoriented the offense to adjust to the zero blitz. He failed.

Should have called timeout and gotten in Goff’s ass and straightened him out...take a 2x4 to his ass until Goff got his shit together
 

TexasRam

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Should have called timeout and gotten in Goff’s ass and straightened him out...take a 2x4 to his ass until Goff got his shit together
Yea blindside unblocked rushers causing turnovers is on the play caller.

That’s why Mcvay said in the post game interview that Mcvay has to do better and takes the responsibility.

If you have evidence to show that Goff changed the play at the line then please submit the evidence for us to review.