The Rams Defense Makes Los Angeles Truly Scary

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https://www.theringer.com/nfl/2017/11/27/16703822/los-angeles-rams-defense-wade-phillips

The Rams Defense Makes Los Angeles Truly Scary
While the offense often gets the attention, don’t sleep on Wade Phillips’s unit
BY DANNY KELLY

danny_rams_defense_getty_ringer.0.jpg

Getty Images/Ringer illustration

If you jumped off the Rams bandwagon after their ugly 24-7 loss to the Vikings last week, now might be a good time to hop back onto it. L.A. snapped the Saints’ eight-game win streak Sunday with a 26-20 victory, a more-dominant-than-the-score-implies win that pushed the now-8-3 Rams back into the conversation as one of the NFC’s best teams.

Sophomore quarterback Jared Goff’s impressive 354-yard, two-touchdown performance against a good Saints defense should keep plenty of the focus and praise centered on the team’s resurgent offense—and that unit’s place in the limelight remains warranted.

First-year head coach and wunderkind playcaller Sean McVay has transformed the worst offense in the league into one of the best and turned Goff from an apparent bust into a legit pro passer. But the Rams are not f--king going 7-9 again this year because of more than just their offense.

L.A.’s quietly fielded one of the most balanced squads in the NFL, and under the direction of veteran defensive coordinator Wade Phillips—a hire that might be McVay’s most impressive coup altogether—the Rams’ talent-packed, playmaking defense has overcome a slow start to make a big jump forward of its own.

Phillips’s defense came into this week’s matchup with the streaking Saints ranked fifth in defensive DVOA, surrendering just 18.6 points per game (seventh) on the year. That group had made up for its middling run defense by being outstanding against the pass, allowing a 76.4 passer rating to opposing quarterbacks (fourth) while racking up 28 sacks (tied for 10th) and 12 interceptions (tied for fifth-most) against just 12 touchdown passes surrendered (tied for sixth-fewest).

But until Sunday, it was easy enough to write off much of that success as the result of a fortuitous schedule: L.A. had posted dominant yet caveat-heavy performances against subpar quarterbacks like Scott Tolzien, Tom Savage, Eli Manning, Carson Palmer, Drew Stanton, and Blake Bortles before faltering last week against Case Keenum and the Vikings.

The Rams needed an impressive performance against a top-tier passer to prove that those numbers were no fluke, and they got it Sunday, when they sacked Brees three times (a Saints’ season high) while holding the New Orleans offense to just three of 13 on third down.

Running back Alvin Kamara was just about the only bright spot for the Saints offense, as the rookie sensation forced nine missed tackles and racked up 188 combined rushing and receiving yards and two touchdowns on just 11 touches. He got so few looks because, after falling behind early, New Orleans leaned on its passing attack—and the Rams clamped down.

Brees’s final stat line (22 of 32 for 246 yards, with one touchdown and a 101.8 passer rating) might look respectable on paper, but Los Angeles stymied the future Hall of Famer for most of the game. Heading into the fourth quarter, Brees had passed for just 96 yards, and prior to New Orleans’ final offensive series—a six-play, 75-yard touchdown drive late in the game that cut L.A.’s 26-13 lead to single digits and made the ending a little more interesting—he went a pedestrian 16-of-26 for 171 yards.

The Rams’ relentless pass-rush unit consistently forced Brees off his spot and pressured him into ill-advised throws, while the team’s secondary blanketed receivers and broke up passes downfield. The box score could’ve been a whole lot uglier for the veteran signal-caller, too, had the Rams not dropped three catchable interceptions, including two in the fourth quarter alone.

Defensive tackle Aaron Donald has yet to receive the desired and well-deserved contract extension that precipitated his preseason holdout, but the three-time Pro Bowler remains the foundation upon which L.A.’s defense rests. Donald notched one sack, a pair of tackles for a loss, and a quarterback hit in the win; and while the fact he plays in the trenches hides it, he’s one of the best defensive players in the NFL.

Donald is currently Pro Football Focus’s top-graded interior player, with 6.0 sacks and three forced fumbles on the year, and while that sack total doesn’t jump out, he’s racked up an incredible 62 total pressures so far, which outpaces all other defensive players—a feat virtually unheard of for an interior defensive lineman not named J.J. Watt. He’s simply unblockable.

But Donald can’t do it all alone, and the Rams have gotten plenty of production from his linemates, too. Phillips has utilized a heavy rotation of linemen up front: Robert Quinn (who grabbed one sack Sunday to push his season total to 3.5), Matt Longacre (4.0 sacks), Michael Brockers (3.0 sacks), and free agent pickup Connor Barwin (4.0 sacks) make opposing quarterbacks’ lives a living hell.

Coming into this week, the Rams had gotten pressure on 33.1 percent of all opponent dropbacks, per Football Outsiders, eighth-best in the league and a rate that’s bound to go up after the win over the Saints.

L.A.’s gotten quality play at every level. Top cornerback Trumaine Johnson has yet to give up a touchdown and has notched two picks on 66 coverage targets, per Pro Football Focus, surrendering a passer rating of just 74.2 to opposing quarterbacks (22nd).

Veteran linebacker Mark Barron is a difference-maker over the middle of the field, where he’s racked up 77 tackles, a sack, three interceptions, and four pass breakups, and Alec Ogletree’s knack for big plays recently earned him a four-year, $42 million extension with the team, a vote of confidence in his ability as the defensive signal-caller in Phillips’s new scheme.

You don’t hear all that much about the Rams’ overhaul this year from a 4-3 to Phillips’s nominal 3-4 because Phillips and his staff have done an outstanding job of integrating a cadre of new players into the scheme while finding new spots for existing players to thrive. The team’s gotten solid play out of its new-look safety tandem of Lamarcus Joyner (who previously played slot corner) and John Johnson (a rookie third-round pick).

At corner, free-agent pickup Kayvon Webster (previously of the Broncos) has played well, with 33 tackles and six pass breakups on the year, and though he missed Sunday’s game, slot defender Nickell Robey-Coleman (formerly with the Bills, and a player I pegged as one of the top bargains in free agency over the summer) has been reliable, with two picks and zero touchdowns allowed on 35 targets in coverage, where he’s held opposing quarterbacks to a 57.7 passer rating (ninth-best).

Phillips came to L.A. with a reputation for crafting his scheme around his players’ strengths, and because of his keen eye for talent and adaptability as a play-caller, the Rams (who fielded a solid defensive unit last season) have not only picked up his defense with little trouble, they’ve actually gotten better.

McVay’s offense (featuring Goff, Todd Gurley, Cooper Kupp, Robert Woods, and Sammy Watkins) is likely to continue to headline the Rams’ surprising metamorphosis into an NFC power, but L.A. wouldn’t be sitting atop the NFC West right now if it weren’t for the team’s underappreciated improvement on defense, too.

Over the last seven games, the Rams have given up just 14.4 points on average—and L.A.’s going to need plenty more of that type of stingy defensive play down the stretch, a brutal late-season slate that features the Cardinals, Eagles, Seahawks, and Titans.

In an era of flawed, unbalanced, and one-dimensional contenders, the Rams stand out: With an explosive offense that can score from anywhere on the field, a top-tier special teams group featuring one of the league’s best punters and a kicker that somehow lives up to the nickname “Legatron,” plus a stout, deep defensive unit, they’re one of a select few teams right now that have ways to beat you in all three phases.
 

bubbaramfan

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One of the best kickers and punters?

Lets try it again.

THE best Kicker and Punter in the league.
 

Riverumbbq

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This defense is good, but i'm looking forward to Wade Phillips' 2018 draft & free agency upgrades to finish his 3-4 transition. Last season was all about McVay & the offense, ... pretty sure Phillips will get the top grade prime beef next year. jmo.
 

fearsomefour

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This defense is good, but i'm looking forward to Wade Phillips' 2018 draft & free agency upgrades to finish his 3-4 transition. Last season was all about McVay & the offense, ... pretty sure Phillips will get the top grade prime beef next year. jmo.
Amen.
All he has to do is listen to me.
 

Jacobarch

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There are still holes on our Offense that we can't ignore tho.

Aging Center and Left tackle spots need to be addressed. You know what a disaster our LT position will be if we don't find someone to backup Whit? I don't think people understand what a value he has been to our team this year. He's 37 years old, I don't know if he has another two seasons left in him.
 

Angry Ram

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Some were calling Robert Quinn a "carcass" last week.

Maybe he merely has a role just like everyone else? Maybe we should just sit back and look at the big picture?
 

Riverumbbq

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There are still holes on our Offense that we can't ignore tho.

Aging Center and Left tackle spots need to be addressed. You know what a disaster our LT position will be if we don't find someone to backup Whit? I don't think people understand what a value he has been to our team this year. He's 37 years old, I don't know if he has another two seasons left in him.

He's 35 y.o., and oh, I think you may be wrong how Rams fans feel about what Whitworth has added. He's been an integral part of the overall offensive upgrade, no-one is dismissing that. Whitworth has been an iron-man this season, and i've seen no reason to believe he can't be one of those rare elite 36 year olds either. We aren't taking him for granted, we know there will soon be a time to draft his eventual replacement, but whether that is this year or next, who really knows ? We haven't seen anything of Cornelius Lucas, and Darrell Williams has had only 30 snaps, so pretty hard to determine what we have for reserves. He may be aging, but Whitworth isn't my main worry at the moment. jmo.
 

bubbaramfan

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Whit is in good shape at 35 and has had no major injuries in his career. No reason he can't play another 2 or 3 years.
 

Merlin

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Our D has come a long way and is a legit playoff unit, but I don't think they're elite just yet. That actually might happen, as our pass defense was the best I've seen thus far this year considering who we were playing. They were attacking, just getting after it, and man they look great when the aggression is there.

As this season runs down I do think the defense is going to improve a little, that basically they haven't played their best ball. But neither has the offense, at least when you consider how they've been slowed by better defenses and the fact that Goff is improving every week.

So of all the playoff field, the Rams are possibly the scariest team. They're a team that might elevate their play on both sides of the ball and that's pretty crazy.
 

leoram

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“Has gotten” is poor grammar and a frequently used phrase in this article. The stats and perspective, while obvious, are at least solid. But if this cat wants to be taken seriously as a journalist...he has gotten to improve his craft a bit.
 

Farr Be It

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Some were calling Robert Quinn a "carcass" last week.

Maybe he merely has a role just like everyone else? Maybe we should just sit back and look at the big picture?

That was me. And I meant it. But today I will praise him. I saw some energy from Quinn yesterday. Not just on a couple plays.

Give credit. We saw a flash of the Mighty Quinn. Wouldn’t that be great timing? We never know what a guy is going through. Maybe his body is finally healing and he is becoming more himself. In fact, I repent of my “carcass” statement.


:rant:Robert Quinn is a beast!!
 

DaveFan'51

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Some were calling Robert Quinn a "carcass" last week.

Maybe he merely has a role just like everyone else? Maybe we should just sit back and look at the big picture?
Stats wise, this week, Quinn matched Donald!
They Both had 5 Tackles - 1 Sack - 1 Tackle-for-loss and 1 QB Hit each! Per ESPN Stats.
And Finally an Offensive Player got called for Holding Quinn!
 

HE WITH HORNS

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We don't even have the personnel to run the 3-4. If we had kept Greg Williams and the 4-3, we would have been even better this year, with an explosive offense to score points and the D could have pinned their ears back.
 

Riverumbbq

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We don't even have the personnel to run the 3-4. If we had kept Greg Williams and the 4-3, we would have been even better this year, with an explosive offense to score points and the D could have pinned their ears back.

That may be true for McVay's first year here, but I have my doubts that Greg Williams would fit in long-term with McVay's 'we' team ethic, ... I can see the potential for a personality clash. I like the Phillips approach, although waiting another year for him to get first shot with the draft and free agency requires some patience, I understand the frustration, but for now i'm just enjoying this epic one year offensive turn-around, McVay and Snead have been a marvel. Phillips will leave an indelible imprint next year imo, and his legacy will be set. jmo.
 

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We don't even have the personnel to run the 3-4. If we had kept Greg Williams and the 4-3, we would have been even better this year, with an explosive offense to score points and the D could have pinned their ears back.

I recall teams running all over us during the Fisher/Williams era as well.
 

Angry Ram

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My opinion of him doesn't change with one sack and a penalty.

Production wise, he's on par with his teammates, with the exception of #99. And no one is on par with him.

Not a fan of singling out players, especially those who body has gone through the blender multiple times.