The defense

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RamWoodie

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Jun 21, 2014
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5,525
I think Marcus Peters is totally lost without Talib to guide him each play. Troy Hill might be our best playing corner at the moment. Marcus Peters has been a big let down in my Ram world with KC looking very smart @ the moment.
Peters has made a living jumping pass routes. If you watch him his problem is biting on the first move of the guy he's playing...and that's how he's getting beat...he's a sucker for the double move right now. He still has good speed and technique though. Don't really know if that calf injury has him the way he's playing...BUT IT AIN'T GOOD.

I think all he needs to do is stop trying to jump routes for the easy pick, keep his man in front of him, and trust his ability to close on the ball, having good position to tackle or knock down the ball. I think Wade and Pleasant (the CB coach), needs to get on his case! Veteran or not his play is costing the defense and they need to tell him that.
 

“Turbo set!”

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Nov 22, 2017
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Third, the amount of mind boggling blatant holding against the Rams that other teams have gotten away with just makes me shake my head. Even a hands to the face or a arm around the neck of a defender. This past week. a hand to the face on AD prevented a sack and resulted in a 47 yard gain for the Packers. How would our defensive stats look if even one play like this was erased each game with a proper holding call? I try to be objective and watch the Rams O-line and I don't see this as a two way street. Of course the other team doesn't have Suh and Donald.

The way the refs are calling penalties on players blocking Donald is starting to remind me how NBA referees were calling penalties on players defending Shaquille O'Neal. Going by the rule book Shaq was fouled just about every time he touched the ball but the refs could not reasonably call a found every single time. It is just about the same thing with Donald.
 

Ellard80

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Aug 11, 2016
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6,912
Giving up 19.4 ppg
Last year we were giving up 19.3 ppg at this point...

However scoring is up in the league.

The Talib injury threw a wrench into the defensive plan this year - with him healthy things might look different.
 

hotanez

NRA Member for Life
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Jun 17, 2014
Messages
7,717
Giving up 19.4 ppg
Last year we were giving up 19.3 ppg at this point...

However scoring is up in the league.

The Talib injury threw a wrench into the defensive plan this year - with him healthy things might look different.
when is the earliest Talib can come back
 

TexasRam

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Jan 13, 2013
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8,125
Giving up 19.4 ppg
Last year we were giving up 19.3 ppg at this point...

However scoring is up in the league.

The Talib injury threw a wrench into the defensive plan this year - with him healthy things might look different.

19.4 is 6th best in the NFL.

If Talib was playing we are possibly top
3 defense or better.

Talib and Fowler could get nasty. hopefully no other injuries strike.
 

Prime Time

PT
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Feb 9, 2014
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Peter
https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/11/04/w...-fitzpatrick-jameis-winston-bucs-future-trade

The Rams Built the Wrong Defense
By GARY GRAMLING

At some point, whether it’s because of great defense or just one of those days, every offense has a dud game. We spent the first seven weeks of the season wondering if the Rams would have anything even resembling a dud on the offensive side of the ball. And then they did!

On Sunday against the Packers, Jared Goff played arguably his worst half of football since he was being schooled in the ways of Jeff Fisher as a rookie. He followed it up by leading L.A. to 27 points over the team’s final seven drives against Green Bay, and (with a little help from Ty Montgomery and the Rams’ own stellar special teams unit) the storm had passed. An opponent finally got a shot at this Rams offense, and the moment slipped away.

Last week showed one way the Rams can be beaten—an off day for Goff—but it isn’t the only way: L.A. can be outscored, largely because their roster-building on the defensive side of the ball seems less than optimal considering what the offense has become.

Let’s back up and look at the way the Patriots have been built during Tom Brady’s run as the best quarterback of all time. Before Brady was Brady, New England featured an aggressive, exotic, blitz-heavy defense that took an aggressive posture.

Now, with Brady able to go punch-for-punch with any offense in the NFL, they’ve gone to a conservative, bend-don’t-break approach. Similarly, the Chiefs are making a similar midseason transition to a conservative defense now that Patrick Mahomes has exceeded Andy Reid’s wildest dreams.

The Rams, meanwhile, can name their number as far as scoring goes most days. They should also have a defense designed to force opponents to put together 14- and 15-play drives to keep pace—the kind of drives that are easily derailed by one offensive lineman’s mistake, as in a holding penalty or a sack allowed.

Instead, this summer L.A. put together an aggressive, ball-hawking unit on the back end, a talented group to be sure. But when combined with the lack of an edge-rushing presence (though perhaps the arrival of Dante Fowler helps there), it has presented a vulnerability for opponents to attack.

Collecting talent isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Marcus Peters, in particular, is on an exceedingly affordable contract and was available for cheap (for reasons beyond his talent). But Peters is a risk/reward player—if he had six interceptions right now that would be better than a conservative, more consistent player in his spot.

But this isn’t a situation where the offense needs help in the form of turnovers, and it certainly isn’t worth the risk most weeks. Peters has been targeted any time an opponent looks for a big play, and he’s been set ablaze more often than not. His five touchdowns allowed (according to Stats Inc.) has him tied with Robert Alford, P.J. Williams and Ahkello Witherspoon among cornerbacks.

The Rams have allowed three or more passing plays of 25-plus yards in six of their eight games, the exceptions being when they faced a Cardinals team still led by a pants-pooping Sam Bradford back in Week 2, and at San Francisco against C.J. Beathard two weeks ago. Allowing big plays will be a problem in January, when the Bradfords and Beathards of the world are on their rumpus-room futons eating pretzeled bread.

That’s why the trip to the Superdome Sunday afternoon will be especially telling. The Rams survived Aaron Rodgers (again, with some help from Ty Montgomery). They allowed 31 points apiece to Kirk Cousins (on a short week) and Russell Wilson. The defense’s most impressive performance against a quality QB came against Philip Rivers, when they beat the Chargers 35-23 back in Week 3.

Drew Brees and the Saints have averaged 31.3 points per game at home over the past two seasons, and Brees is one of the best of all time at manipulating defensive backs. When these teams met in L.A. last season, a different-look Rams defense held Brees in check, and the offense helped keep Brees off the field in a (relative) defensive struggle.

Last year’s defense is the kind of unit that would have meshed better with this year’s all-world offense. Marcus Peters is a talent, but he seems to be the wrong kind of talent if you want to complement an offense like this.
 

Faceplant

Still celebrating Superbowl LVI
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Yikes ^^^. Wade needs to corral Peters in a game like this.