MEDIA FALLOUT: Rams run all over the Cowboys

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RamsOfCastamere

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http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000001010162/article/rams-rushing-attack-overwhelms-cowboys

Rams' rushing attack overwhelms Cowboys

  • By Michael Silver
  • NFL.com columnist

LOS ANGELES -- Jared Goff had the football in his hands, along with what was left of the Dallas Cowboys' postseason dreams -- and cold-hearted deceit on his brain. The Los Angeles Rams' slower-than-the-405-at-rush-hour quarterback needed seven yards to close out a divisional playoff victory at the Coliseum on Saturday night, and to the surprise of 77,187 fans, millions of television viewers and 11 Dallas defenders, he was determined to get those yards with his legs.

After taking a third-and-7 snap from his own 28 with two minutes remaining and faking a handoff to halfback C.J. Anderson, Goff rolled to his right and took a cursory glance at tight end Tyler Higbee, who was being smothered by Cowboys linebacker Sean Lee in man-to-man coverage near the Rams' sideline. At that moment Goff, on a night two L.A. running backs had already eclipsed 100 rushing yards, knew he would have to carry the load on the play that could secure a 30-22 triumph and send the Ramsinto next Sunday's NFC Championship Game.

"I didn't have any other option," Goff told me afterward. "It was a pass play, but they were in man coverage, and you can't let the clock stop. So, if it's not wide open, you've gotta run it."

Goff rambled forward and closed in on the first-down stick, with only Lee to beat, and for a split second his head coach, Sean McVay, feared an unfavorable outcome. As McVay explained later while prancing around the locker room, "I thought maybe he was gonna (come up short and) run out of bounds."

In actuality Goff -- like the Rams' bench area, the Coliseum stands and the City of Angels at large -- was about to get turnt.

Shortly before reaching the sideline, Goff planted his foot and spun inside of Lee, finally falling forward for an 11-yard gain that essentially clinched the victory and made him the first Rams quarterback to reach the NFC title game since Hall of Famer Kurt Warner 18 years earlier.

"He's a little more nimble than people give him credit for," McVay said of Goff. "Give it up for Jared Vick."

While this may be the only time in his entire career that Goff, even sarcastically, is compared to perhaps the most feared running quarterback in modern NFL history, this was a victory that provoked elation and hyperbole.

For McVay, who spent the past two weeks rolling his eyes at jokes suggesting that anyone he's ever metcan land an NFL head coaching job, there was nothing subtle about the Rams' first triumph over a team with a winning record since their dizzying 54-51 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs nearly two months earlier -- and the first career playoff win for the 32-year-old wunderkind.

A little more than a year ago, after McVay had guided the Rams to a shocking playoff appearance in his first season, they put forth an underwhelming performance in a 26-13 defeat to the Atlanta Falcons at the Coliseum -- a game which McVay later acknowledged to friends had seemed "a little big" for his young team.

This time, the second-seeded Rams -- since energized by an influx of battle-tested veterans -- were grounded, in more than one sense of the word. Before churning out 273 rushing yards against the NFC East champion Cowboys, who'd limited the Seahawks' impressive power-running attack to 73 yards in a 24-22 first-round playoff victory, the NFC West champion Rams were riled up by McVay's stirring pregame speech, during which the coach implored his players, "Let's write the f----- story ourselves. This is Chapter 17, and we're writing our own story."

Saturday's story featured a pair of protagonists -- one likely, and one whose mere presence on the field would have seemed implausible a month ago. When star halfback Todd Gurley suffered a left knee injury during the Rams' 30-23 defeat to the Philadelphia Eagles at the Coliseum on Dec. 16, a game that would mark his final regular-season appearance, L.A. was suddenly thin at the position, as backup Malcolm Brown had been placed on injured reserve the previous week after undergoing a procedure to reset his clavicle.

"When Gurley got hurt, we wanted to find the best running back available that has played in meaningful games," McVay recalled Saturday. "We found a guy who has stepped up in every important game he has ever played."

That guy, C.J. Anderson, was the offensive star of the Denver Broncos' Super Bowl 50 victory over the Carolina Panthers. Released by the Broncos last April, Anderson signed with Carolina, but after nine games of limited action (24 carries, 104 yards) as Christian McCaffrey's backup, he was waived on Nov. 12. He signed with the Oakland Raiders in early December, was inactive during his only game with the Silver and Black and was cut a week later, on Dec. 11.

At that point Anderson, 27, had reason to question his football-playing future. On Monday, Dec. 17, he was at his Charlotte home helping to load boxes onto a moving van headed for his new residence in Katy, Texas, when he got a call from the Rams saying they wanted to sign him. "Yeah, I was pretty surprised," Anderson admitted.

After flying to Houston to help complete the move, Anderson showed up in Southern California -- and revitalized both his career and the Rams' offense. In running for a combined 299 yards in the Rams' final two regular season games, victories over NFC West also-rans Arizona and San Francisco, Anderson proved his worth. On Saturday, he kept it rolling against one of the league's top defenses, carrying 23 times for 123 yards and two touchdowns -- with a long run of 15 yards.

"I'm just old and fat, man," Anderson said, smiling, as he sat at his locker after the game. Asked if he thought the football world had expected his re-emergence, Anderson replied, "They definitely forgot. But it's been the same game since 2013. It's not flashy. It's not great. There aren't a lot of big runs. It's just moving the chains."

Said Rams offensive line coach Aaron Kromer: "He runs old school, the way you're supposed to run: Lower your pads, charge ahead, and if they try to arm-tackle you, run right through the arm tackle."

While Anderson's vision, patience and physicality after contact singed the Dallas defense, Gurley (16 carries, 115 yards) flashed his feature-back credentials at key moments, most notably during a 35-yard touchdown run that put the Rams up 20-7 with 3:27 left in the first half.

"When Todd sprang it," Anderson said, "it was like the defense said, 'Oh, s---. We can't stop both of them.'"

Said Goff: "We ran the hell out of the ball. C.J.'s smart, tough and fits our offense well. Todd's the best back in the league; he's just so explosive and does so many great things, and C.J. is the perfect complement. For the first time in awhile, you see Todd getting his rest and busting off these long runs, because he's fresh."

When Goff wasn't handing off to Gurley or Anderson -- his fellow Cal alum, who entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent in 2013 -- he was efficiently running McVay's offense, completing 15 of 28 passes for 186 yards, with no turnovers or sacks.

Referencing comments earlier in the week from Cowboys defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence, who told reporters, "I go into every week wanting to take the quarterback's soul," Rams cornerback Aqib Talib said afterward, "(No.) 90 said he was gonna take Jared's soul? He didn't even touch him."

That clowning was mild compared to that of Talib's fellow cornerback, Marcus Peters, who unloaded on Cowboys receiver Amari Cooper both physically (incurring a personal foul for shoving him in the neck area following a first-quarter play) and verbally.

Two days before the game Cooper, a former Raiders receiver acquired by the Cowboys in a late October trade, had said of Talib (formerly with the Broncos) and Peters (formerly with the Chiefs), "I've played against those guys twice a year, both of them, I know them in and out."

On Saturday, Cooper caught six passes for 65 yards, including the 29-yard touchdown reception that gave Dallas a 7-3 lead with 6:03 left in the first quarter, a play on which he appeared to beat L.A. free safety Lamarcus Joyner.

When I spoke with him at his locker after the game, Peters said, "Tell Coop I thought he knew us. He said he played us two times a year... that's 12 times he played against me and (Talib). I think he got strapped tonight. He had that TD, but he didn't do s---. (While incurring the personal foul) I choked him out. He couldn't do nothin'. He was crying for his mama. That's how he is. That's why the Raiders got rid of him."

Then Peters smiled and said, "I'm just playin'."

Oh.

This much is certain: On Saturday, Peters and the Rams' other defenders were playing for keeps. L.A. limited star halfback Ezekiel Elliott, the 2018 regular-season rushing champion and the focal point of the Dallas attack, to 47 yards on 20 carries, ending a Cowboys drive by stuffing him for no gain on a fourth-and-1 attempt from the Rams' 35 on the first play of the fourth quarter. Veteran defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh had his best game in a Rams uniform, joining fellow offseason acquisitions Talib and Peters in rising to the moment.

The Rams' negation of Elliott left third-year quarterback Dak Prescott (20 of 32, 266 yards, one touchdown, no interceptions) to do the heavy lifting, as he attempted to rally Dallas back from deficits of 23-7 and 30-15. When Prescott lunged into the end zone to cut the Rams' lead to eight with 2:11 remaining, the Cowboys -- with three timeouts and the two-minute warning -- knew they needed a defensive stop to have a shot at tying the game.

Short runs by Gurley and Anderson set up the third-and-7 play, at which point Goff added some unexpected oomph to the potent Rams rushing attack. Already, Gurley and Anderson had become the fourth set of teammates with 100-yard rushing performances in the same game in the last 30 postseasons, a list that also includes the Falcons' Warrick Dunn and Michael (Don't Call Me Jared) Vick in 2004.

After Goff's 11-yard run, veteran left tackle Andrew Whitworth, who had a monster game, told the quarterback, "Look at you, you little athlete."

Now, the athlete and his teammates will face the winner of today's game between the top-seeded New Orleans Saints and sixth-seeded (and defending Super Bowl champion) Philadelphia Eagles -- two teams that defeated L.A. during the regular season.

"We're excited," Goff said as he mingled outside the Coliseum with friends and family members about an hour after eliminating the Cowboys, his thoughts already focused on the biggest game of his young career. "Either way, whether we're here (if the Eagles win) or in New Orleans (if the Saints win), we're gonna have to do a lot better than we did last time."

If Goff and his teammates want the final chapter of their story to include a trip to Super Bowl LIII, they don't have any other option.

Follow Michael Silver on Twitter @mikesilver.
Peters said Cooper was crying for his Mama! Ha! :ROFLMAO:
 

RamFan503

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Well... the rams defense was ranked 23rd total and gave up a league worst 5.1 yards per carry.

They got it done last night.. but it was the obvious concern going into the playoffs.

Booger only stating the obvious there...


The offensive line.,... yeah that was a stretch on his part.
But that’s also ignoring the fact that the Rams defense played pretty damn good run defense late in the season (bears game aside).
Aikman mentioned... it. There were a lot of cowboys fans. They tend to get more quite as their assess get beat.

But doesn't matter still would rather play at home then the superdome.
I think why it often gets overstated is that traveling fans generally buy good seat locations. If they are flying out and staying in hotels, eating out, etc... the price of the game itself doesn’t matter as much. So sure, there were a lot of cowgirl fans in the camera angle but not as many overall as those kinds of shots would have people believe.

No doubt there were quite a few cowgirl fans and they were fairly loud at times. But you’re right. They got real quiet as the two headed monster ran all over their asses.
 

Prime Time

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The reason so many people watched last night's game, according to the author of this piece who is based in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, is because of the Cowboys. Talk about bias. The good news is that all those Cowboys fans that watched got to see their team get punched in the face repeatedly by the Rams. Mike Foolio picked the Cowboys to win and I'm still waiting for him to resurface.
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https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...ets-saturday-night-viewership-record-for-fox/

Cowboys-Rams game sets Saturday night viewership record for FOX
Posted by Charean Williams on January 13, 2019

The power of the Cowboys.

In case you were wondering whether the Cowboys were still America’s Team. . . .

FOX announced it set a record for the most viewers ever for a Saturday night prime-time event. More than 33.4 million viewers tuned in to watch the Cowboys’ loss to the Rams, according to Nielsen Media Research and Adobe Analytics.

That was up 25 percent over last year’s comparable window.

FOX also said the divisional-round game was the most streamed NFL playoff game ever on FOX Digital, breaking the record set a week earlier when the Cowboys beat the Seahawks.

The Cowboys-Rams drew a 17.9 rating and 33 share.

The only bad news for FOX is the Cowboys now are eliminated. So while the network’s numbers for the NFC Championship Game still will look good next week, they won’t be as good as they otherwise would have been with the Cowboys.

In the regular season, the Cowboys had the most-watched game (as they almost always do on Thanksgiving). Their Thanksgiving Day game against Washington drew 30.5 million viewers.

The Cowboys’ Dec. 2 game against the Eagles had the third-most viewers of any regular-season game with 25.2 million.
 

Mackeyser

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Hey Cowherd, Can the Rams crack your top 10 team power rankings list, with only 4 teams left in the playoffs after tonight?

Pretty sure that the Rams lost places with Walter after that commanding win.

I said it before and I'll say it again...

After the Rams win the Super Bowl, Walter's final power rankings will have the Rams as "overrated" and no higher than 3rd...
 

Mackeyser

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The reason so many people watched last night's game, according to the author of this piece who is based in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, is because of the Cowboys. Talk about bias. The good news is that all those Cowboys fans that watched got to see their team get punched in the face repeatedly by the Rams. Mike Foolio picked the Cowboys to win and I'm still waiting for him to resurface.
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https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...ets-saturday-night-viewership-record-for-fox/

Cowboys-Rams game sets Saturday night viewership record for FOX
Posted by Charean Williams on January 13, 2019

The power of the Cowboys.

In case you were wondering whether the Cowboys were still America’s Team. . . .

FOX announced it set a record for the most viewers ever for a Saturday night prime-time event. More than 33.4 million viewers tuned in to watch the Cowboys’ loss to the Rams, according to Nielsen Media Research and Adobe Analytics.

That was up 25 percent over last year’s comparable window.

FOX also said the divisional-round game was the most streamed NFL playoff game ever on FOX Digital, breaking the record set a week earlier when the Cowboys beat the Seahawks.

The Cowboys-Rams drew a 17.9 rating and 33 share.

The only bad news for FOX is the Cowboys now are eliminated. So while the network’s numbers for the NFC Championship Game still will look good next week, they won’t be as good as they otherwise would have been with the Cowboys.

In the regular season, the Cowboys had the most-watched game (as they almost always do on Thanksgiving). Their Thanksgiving Day game against Washington drew 30.5 million viewers.

The Cowboys’ Dec. 2 game against the Eagles had the third-most viewers of any regular-season game with 25.2 million.

In before the "people only watched for the Cowboys" take...
 

Merlin

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In before the "people only watched for the Cowboys" take...

No doubt. Rams have drawn great all season long and probably because they have a ton of star players and explosive offense. You can try saying it's due to opponents but at some point it's clear the Rams are a top draw team now.
 

Prime Time

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Pretty sure that the Rams lost places with Walter after that commanding win.

I said it before and I'll say it again...

After the Rams win the Super Bowl, Walter's final power rankings will have the Rams as "overrated" and no higher than 3rd...

After crapping all over them he still picked the Rams to win 26-23 but not to cover the spread. Strange dude.

http://walterfootball.com/nflpicks2018_19early.php

LOS ANGELES OFFENSE: The first three home teams on this week's slate have a common theme. All three lost important offensive pieces in the second half of the season, and all three regressed as a result. For the Chiefs, it was Kareem Hunt. The Rams, meanwhile, haven't been the same since Cooper Kupp got hurt.

The Rams were very explosive offensively in the first half of the year, but that changed following the Week 12 bye. Since then, the Rams were limited to 23 points against the Lions (prior to a bogus, last-second touchdown), 15 points against the Bears and 23 points against the Eagles. They were better in the final two weeks of the season, but were battling the Cardinals and 49ers, two bad teams.

I believe Kupp's absence played a huge part in the Rams' declining offense. Kupp isn't the most talented receiver the Rams have, but he was Jared Goff's favorite weapon, especially on third down. Without Kupp, I expect the Rams to struggle moving the chains aerially against the Cowboys.

Dallas has a terrific pass rush that will rattle Goff a bit, just as the Eagles were able to do to him in Week 15. That will throw off the timing Goff has with his remaining receivers as he throws into an improved secondary.

It would be great for the Rams if they could hide Goff a bit by relying heavily on Todd Gurley. They were not able to do this against two teams that stop the run well late in the year, the Bears and Eagles. Both teams have top-10 DVOA run defenses.

The Cowboys do as well, ranking fifth in that regard. They completely stuffed Chris Carson last week. While Gurley offers a greater challenge, I believe Dallas will be able to limit Gurley effectively enough to force Goff into throwing more than Sean McVay wants him to.

DALLAS OFFENSE: While the Cowboys are stellar versus ground attacks, the Rams are awful at containing the run. They're 28th in DVOA rush defense. I don't have to tell you how extremely poorly that bodes for them. Ezekiel Elliott is fresh after his recent week off, so he figures to dominate this contest.

The Cowboys will be able to feed off Elliott picking up huge chunks of yardage. Dak Prescott will have frequent short-yardage situations, which will help against Aaron Donald and company. If the Cowboys still had Travis Frederick up front, I'd feel much better about their chances of containing Donald, Ndamukong Suh and Michael Brockers, but the only talented interior lineman Dallas has is Zack Martin. Thus, it'll be important for the Cowboys to establish Elliott.

The Rams will be able to limit Amari Cooper with Aqib Talib, so Prescott will have to look elsewhere on most occasions. The rest of Dallas' receiving corps is either pedestrian or injured - why Cole Beasley played in Week 17 is beyond me - so that could be a problem, especially considering Prescott's accuracy problems. That said, Prescott will have success dumping off passes to Elliott, as the Rams struggle to cover in space because of a poor linebacking corps.

RECAP: These are two teams I was hoping to fade this weekend, so it's unfortunate that they're matched up against each other. Both have been heavily overrated for most of the year. In the case of the Rams, they've been overrated the entire season. Their defense isn't quite what people made it out to be, while their offense has declined in the wake of Kupp's injury.

The Cowboys will be able to limit the Rams and potentially keep this game close. That should mean that they'll cover. The Rams are favored by seven, which seems a bit odd to me. Their current regime has no history of playoff success, and yet they're expected to just blow out a team that matches up well against their offense? I don't see it.

We saw Goff choke last year, and I believe that could happen again. As mentioned before, the Rams struggled against good competition down the stretch, and most of their early-season wins came against teams that weren't playing well. This spread seems a touch too high to me, so I'll be on the Cowboys for a unit or two. If +7.5 appears, it'll almost certainly be two.

Week 19 NFL Pick: Rams 26, Cowboys 23

http://walterfootball.com/overratedunderrated.php

NFL Overrated and Underrated Teams

I've posted overrated and underrated NFL teams on my NFL Picks page for a while, but I thought it deserved its own section. I'll update this page every week during the season as well as periodically during the offseason. Follow me @walterfootball for updates.

Updated Jan. 13, 2019

ramsb_logo.gif
Los Angeles Rams
The Rams looked unstoppable against the Vikings on an early Thursday night. When that happened, I wrote, "Be wary of teams that appear that way on national TV. They can often disappoint afterward because they're way overvalued. Remember the Eagles from numerous years ago with their controversial quarterback when they couldn't be stopped against the Redskins? That's what the Rams' win over Minnesota felt like."

As it turns out, the Rams haven't covered the spread since beating Minnesota, save for their Week 7 victory over C.J. Boat Hard, or whatever his name is, a Week 13 win over the Lions, thanks to a fluky touchdown in the final seconds, and a Week 16 blowout at Arizona, the worst team in the NFL. Excluding the Chiefs and Chargers, they have beaten teams that are a combined 61-99-2. Because looking at numbers is lazy, let's analyze the wins:

- Rams beat the Raiders after trailing at halftime. Oakland's only win thus far came via horrible officiating versus a rookie quarterback making his first start.

- Rams shut out the Cardinals, who were nearly blanked at home the week before versus the Redskins.

- Rams defeated the Vikings by seven. Minnesota tied the Packers and a hobbled Aaron Rodgers and then was blown out by Buffalo. Plus, some poor officiating buried the Vikings.

- Rams snuck out a win against a pedestrian Seattle team, as Los Angeles couldn't stop the run.

- Rams beat the Broncos by three, although they were up by more before some garbage scores. Case Keenum was horrible until the Rams went into a prevent, and Denver stinks overall.

- Rams crushed C.J. Boat Hat, or whatever his name is.

- Rams barely beat the Packers, who led for most of the game. Had Ty Montgomery not fumbled the kickoff at the end, Aaron Rodgers probably would've led Green Bay to victory.

- Rams beat the Seahawks in a home game where they trailed entering the fourth quarter.

- Rams beat the Lions, who were able to hang around.

- Rams destroyed the Cardinals, the worst team in the NFL.

- Rams killed the 49ers, who were guilty of lots of mistakes.

The Rams beat the Chiefs, but only by three despite having so much going for them. They were at home, they had emotion from the wildfires on their side, and they got almost every single call by what almost seemed like a corrupt officiating crew. The Chiefs nearly won, and I imagine they'd prevail at home or a neutral field.

With all that in mind, no one should've been surprised that the Bears and Eagles dominated the Rams. Had Mitchell Trubisky not had a meltdown, Chicago would've won by 20-plus. Meanwhile, the Eagles were up 30-13 before they took their foot off the gas. What a shock that the Rams struggled against good teams after beating cream puffs all year!

The Rams just beat the Cowboys in the divisional round in the playoffs, but the Cowboys were the worst team remaining, and it wasn't even close. Jared Goff's inconsistent passing allowed the Cowboys to hang around, so this does not bode well for next week.
 

BatteringRambo

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Actually he picked the Cowpokes give me a moment and I'll find it. Unless you mean around 10pm last night then yes he took the Rams (y)
 

Mackeyser

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I'd say that I'd love to see how Walter spins the Rams victory, but since IDGAF about what Walter has to say about the Rams, I guess it will be an eternal mystery...

Except he'll find some way to call it a Cowboy loss as opposed to a Rams win.

Then again, we're used to that so...

Moving on.

Edit: We also had one of the tougher schedules in the NFL AND we were one of only two teams to go 5-3 against playoff teams iirc.

But yeah....5 wins in 8 games against teams that made the playoffs and we're overrated...

That level of stupid isn't natural. You need supplements or radiation to get that stupid...
 

RamBall

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I'd say that I'd love to see how Walter spins the Rams victory, but since IDGAF about what Walter has to say about the Rams, I guess it will be an eternal mystery...

Except he'll find some way to call it a Cowboy loss as opposed to a Rams win.

Then again, we're used to that so...

Moving on.
Its amazing that the Rams are going to the NFC Championship game without beating any good teams along the way.
Not sure if that needed blue font, but I didnt want anyone to misread my Rams fandom.
 

Karate61

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Colin predicted a Rams win btw. A closer one that what we had but a Rams win nonetheless.
He seemed kinda pissed off having to pick the Rams though. No way he picks Rams over Saints.
 

Ram_Rally

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I don't have a clip but I'm watching good morning football. Schrader mentioned that he has a good source Mcvay and the Rams definitely "saw three pundits on this show all picking the cowboys and five pundits on ESPN praising the cowboys" . Kay, Nate, and the annoying one had an egged look on their faces haha .
 

Ram_Rally

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Ugh, I don't like giving them bulletin board material. The Rams had quite a bit, and they were damn sure to call those people out when they won, there's no need to give them extra motivation.
Sounds like maybe we have the extra motivation based on his comments.
 

Elmgrovegnome

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Pretty sure that the Rams lost places with Walter after that commanding win.

I said it before and I'll say it again...

After the Rams win the Super Bowl, Walter's final power rankings will have the Rams as "overrated" and no higher than 3rd...

I'd venture to guess that McVay being a star and Washington sucking has him a bit irritated.







I don't want to see it. This has trouble written all over it, especially if he gets beat a few times and the Saints and their coaches rub it in. I envision game changing unsportsmanlike conduct on Peters' part. I'm worried that his temper is what ends up the deciding factor in a Rams lose.