What Saints Fans Are Saying

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dang

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I somewhat understand bringing the score of games into the conversation but ultimately is all about wins and losses. So what's more relevant - that the Rams only beat the Packers by 2 points or the fact that they beat the Packers? In the NFL with a few exceptions any team can beat another team in a head to head competition - especially in the first half of a season. Winning each week is not an easy task - so winning 8 games in 8 weeks says something about the toughness and quality of the Rams team.
 

Karate61

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I somewhat understand bringing the score of games into the conversation but ultimately is all about wins and losses. So what's more relevant - that the Rams only beat the Packers by 2 points or the fact that they beat the Packers? In the NFL with a few exceptions any team can beat another team in a head to head competition - especially in the first half of a season. Winning each week is not an easy task - so winning 8 games in 8 weeks says something about the toughness and quality of the Rams team.
Before game: Greenbay is back. They're healthy. They're powerful again and will beat the Rams.

After Game: There's Aaron Rodger's, and then the rest of the team sucks. Aaron should demand a trade!
 

Steve808

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You know what ticks me off? In Hawaii, the local pundits are saying the Saints will win because of their "physical running game" and because the Saints are so good, etc etc and the Rams have been "lucky" winning close games.

1. The Rams are a physical running team that just happens to have a great passing game.

2. While some Rams games were close, the opposing team had no real chance (the ball) with a chance to win the game at the end, save for an onside kick.

3. The Rams shut down the Saints last year and won quite handily. Yeah, the final score was 26-20 but aside from Kamara burning us for a 75 yard TD early on, the Rams shut them down and a trash TD at the end made the score 26-20 instead of 26-13.

4. The Rams are better this season.

5. The Saints would have lost to the Browns if they had a decent kicker and the Ravens kicker missed just about he only extra point of his life against the Saints which allowed them to win. If the Saints lose to the Browns and Ravens (very possible), we aren't even having this conversation.
 

kurtfaulk

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.

Teddy bruschi's bold prediction today on nfl live.

The saints d will shut down Gurley and then they will sack Goff 7 times.

He couldn't even keep a straight face after saying it.

He picked the saints to win, Darren woodson picked the rams to win. Both think it will be a shootout.

.
 

Picked4td

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i keep seeing all this talk about their run D but I cant help but wonder if its actually good or its more a product of a terrible pass D.
 

Elmgrovegnome

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https://saintsreport.com/threads/kay-adams-picks-saints-over-rams-surprise-surprise.393936/

Kay Adams picks Saints over Rams (surprise,surprise)


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gz1L_jpJeA8


I hope the Saints DOMINATE!!!!! It will have the others shut their pie hole!
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I hope we blow them out just to silence all these "expert" talking heads. I'm just tired of hearing them all slobber over the Rams incessantly. They are NOT a dominate team and are very lucky to have won some games they should've lost.
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in all fairness, we weren't lucky to win the Browns game??
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And Ravens.
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This.
Falcons game could have gone either way too. Baltimore as well.
We’ve been a bit fortunate ourselves.
I’ve never understood how anyone gets upset at what the talking heads say. Nothing personal, just doesn’t make sense to me. I couldn’t care less what they say, whether it be good or bad.
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I'll play the bad guy for a sec.

We've had 3 games where you could say we could have lost as well. "Almost" losing in the NFL isn't a bad thing. It's not college. Winning close games is actually a sign of a good team.
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She has 3 pair of black and gold shades lol. Definitely loves the Saints.

I hope and think we can beat the Rams but I know they are a good team. And we are right in the middle of a very tough stretch of games. This one is a toss up to me.
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If we do blow them out expect the national media to say exactly that

It won’t be about how good the saints are

It’ll be about how the Rams weren’t ever as good as we thought they were
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I want to beat them for many reasons, but one of the main reasons is to rub it in Suh's face that he chose the wrong team.
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If this game had not been in N.O I would say the rams would win, but I think dome field advantage will b just enough. It wouldn't surprise me if both teams score over 30 in this game
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I think similar to the Minn game offensively we are going to take what they give us. Try to establish the run/short passing game...the key is going to be limiting the Rams big plays and putting pressure on Goff. If we can force 2 turnovers and take care of the ball offensively I feel that we will win...I think the Rams are going to try to attack our obvious weaknesses in the secondary, we will need to get consistent pressure on Goff to counter it....
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Rams are the best team in the league right now, their 8-0 record validates that and remember like us they are playing
a first place schedule. Now that being
said they do play in a weaker division than us.
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i dont think goff is gonna be ready for the noise. he wont be able to hear mcvay in his helmet.
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Yeah, that's what the last guys was missing. The advantage of the dome isn't because Gurly hasn't played in big stadiums under flashy lights. It's because McVay coaches Goff at the line through the earpiece. They've played in loud environments before, like Seattle earlier this season.

Goff threw for 300 yards but had two picks in that game and they barely pulled out the win with a late game comeback. This will be a similar game, except Seattle's offense doesn't hold a candle to ours when we need to score points. The noise won't shut the Rams offense down, but I think it will be enough of a disruption for the Saints to get the win.
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The two picking the Rams make no sense at all. The Saints have to stop the Rams, but the Rams don't have to stop the Saints? What the hell is that about? Like the Saints have some sort of mediocre offense? And they're talking about Gurley like "Oh he can run the screen, he can do this, he can do that, they beat Seattle and Green Bay" .... we have people (see: multiple) who can do the same things Gurley can and the Saints are better than Seattle and Green Bay.

The only way the Rams win is if the Saints don't execute. Our defense can shut down their run and our offense can hang points against any team in the NFL, especially in the 4th quarter when it really counts. On top of that they're playing in New Orleans. They haven't had to travel further than 1 time zone yet this year and the 2018 New Orleans Saints is a lot better than the 2018 Seattle Seahacks.



A week before the season Kay Adams said that she feels the NFC West is wide open. Any of the four teams could win it because they are all very good. You have Garapolo in San Francisco, David Johnson in Arizona, Gurley in L.A., and Wilson in Seattle.

So apparently, in her mind football teams are,teams are composed of one player.
 

CGI_Ram

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This is going to be a popular week for the experts to pick against us.

Heck, the next 3 weeks we’ll continue to see it.

Statistically we’re due to lose. So, the experts will play those odds in this stretch of tough match-ups.

I get it.

But, let’s see them use legit reasons like the Saints run offense vs our run Defense. That’s a good debate.

But to put down our schedule, or suggest we squeaked out some wins... come on.
 

RamzFanz

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2. While some Rams games were close, the opposing team had no real chance (the ball) with a chance to win the game at the end, save for an onside kick.

Well, in fairness, GB had the ball at the end of the fourth with over 2 minutes left, 1 timeout, down by only 2 points, and coughed it up on the KO return. Had that not happened, I would give AR at least a 50/50 chance of pulling out the win, probably better. Rams only "lucky" win of the season?
 

Prime Time

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https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/11/01/saints-rams-sean-payton-sean-mcvay-week-9-nfl

Saints vs. Rams: How Asshole Face Studies Up to Borrow from the Best (Including Sean McVay)
  • To keep his Drew Brees-led offense fresh and unpredictable, Asshole Face devotes hours each week to watching what other innovative offenses around the league are doing—and cribbing from them. That’s why when Sean McVay’s high-flying Rams visit the Superdome this Sunday, they could see a little bit of themselves in what the Saints throw at them
By ALBERT BREER

image

Getty Images

The play itself looks normal enough. Third-and-goal, Drew Brees in the shotgun, three receivers to his right, Alvin Kamara flanked left outside Michael Thomas, and motioning in. Brees takes the snap, shovels the ball to Kamara, who goes wide, cuts back between blocks from rookie receiver Tre’Quan Smith and tight end Josh Hill, and prances into the end zone standing.

That three-yard touchdown last week made the score Saints 7, Vikings 0. Quietly, it also said a whole lot more about Asshole Face than you might think.

Payton is 54 now, and it’s been almost 13 years since New Orleans hired him. He’s long since established himself as one of the pre-eminent offensive minds of this era of professional football. And he’s not too proud to admit that he stole that play.

“That was a play seen the week before, Patriots vs. Bears,” Payton said. “Great idea. It fit with what we were doing and had nothing to do with the Vikings. And yet, it applied to their defensive structure. And so, certainly, most of the week is spent watching your opponent’s tape, and yet there’s still going to be a part of the week devoted to the league.”

Go ahead and look it up. You’ll find that, indeed, the Patriots’ last touchdown against the Bears in Week 7 looks pretty much identical to the Saints’ first touchdown against the Vikings in Week 8. Tom Brady in the shotgun. James White motioning in from his left, three receivers to his right. Easy money. A two-yard touchdown, scored, again, standing up.

New Orleans won’t see either of those teams, New England or Chicago, until the postseason, if they see them at all. And yet here’s Payton, in the middle of a game week, with the much-ballyhooed divisional playoff rematch against Minnesota on the horizon, and he’s watching their tape, and applying it days later.

Think of this as Payton’s own school of professional development, and know that it isn’t something he and his staff see as a luxury. It’s a necessity.

“We have to. Yeah, we have to,” Payton continued. “The last thing you want is some trading tip that’s going hot on the floor, and you just didn’t pay attention to it, and everyone else is. Very quickly in our league, a new thought or an idea shows up.”

Now, what’s really cool about this? Payton has a group of offensive coaches from around the league that he makes sure to watch every week. And that list now includes a certain 32-year-old whom he’s up against on Sunday.

But we’re starting with Payton, and his 6-1 Saints, and their showdown with the Rams on Sunday at the Superdome, and how Sean McVay and Payton relate to one another, in a way that McVay might not even know about.

As the Saints coach and I were talking on Thursday morning, he was getting ready to go through a folder of red-zone cutups from across the NFL—“and there’ll be four things I write down that will apply to this week’s game, and it won’t be necessarily just against the Rams.” Coaching assistant Kevin Petry puts the package together, as he does reels of all the touchdowns and third-down plays in the league from the week before.

And then, there’s the tape of specific teams that Payton needs to see.

“We have to see the Patriots offensive film each week,” Payton said. “I could go on. I’m not gonna give you everyone, but Kansas City we have to see each week, Philly, there are teams that we feel each week are doing some different things, unique things, that we want to see and we want to capture. And then how does it fit what we’re doing? I think that’s important. I don’t care what age you are, in this league.”

He wants to see, in other words, what the Goldman-Sachs and JP Morgans of the NFL are doing on the league’s trading floor. The Rams, as he sees them, are the new traders of offensive intel. So each week, just as he’ll see what Josh McDaniels and Andy Reid and Doug Pederson are cooking up, Payton has a McVay file ready.

“It’s definitely one of the tapes we’ll look at,” Payton says.

And as he said, as much as the idea is to continue to keep the offense Drew Brees has been running for 13 years growing at frenetic pace, it’s also to keep up with the others that he believes are approaching the race the way the Saints are.

“I don’t think everyone in the league is that way, he said. “But I know if we do something unique, a handful of coaches are watching us.”

In other words, just as he can show you how White’s score in the Bears-Patriots game helped set up Kamara’s touchdown seven days later, he could unearth one of his concepts being cribbed in some other NFL city. And it’s pretty simple, if you think about it. The idea is that you’re only reallygetting better if you’re getting better at a faster rate than who and what you’re up against.

That’s why, when I brought up the magnitude of this week’s matchup—it could well determine where the NFC title game is played—Payton wasn’t having it. Nor was he much intrigued at comparing this year’s roster, widely believed to be among the best he’s fielded, against his those of his previous years. Or was he worried much about the win-now message the Eli Apple trade could send to his locker room.

“We’re trying to win, and that’s understood to begin with,” he said.

What Payton did raise was the concern that his team, hot as any in the NFL, had to get better on third down on both sides of the ball. And that it needed to get better in the red zone on defense, and generate more explosive plays on offense.

That’s what all the midweek studying is about to Payton – getting better. So this week, of course he’s watched a ton of Rams defensive tape. And as he does every week, he watched the Rams offense. That means the unbeaten juggernaut from the West Coast may be getting a little of its own medicine on Sunday—which, by the way, is as much a sign of respect, from Payton to McVay, as anything.

“Absolutely,” Payton said. “It’s definitely one of the tapes we’ll look at. You’re always looking for ideas and thoughts. [McVay] does a good job with two or three plays that come out of the same formation. There goes a turbo motion, they hand it to the receiver. There goes a turbo motion, and it’s a zone fallback. Then a turbo motion and a play-action. Then on to the next. Shift, Quick bunch, there at the line.

“They stress you a little bit. As the late [Eagles defensive coordinator] Jim Johnson used to say—some of that at-the-line shift-motion is a way for the offense to blitz the defense. And I think he does that extremely well. Splits are narrow, not a lot of big wide splits, so you get a lot of spray-release routes, routes that expand or routes that come across the field. And certainly the quarterback’s got good command of what they’re doing.”

In short, McVay has given Payton plenty to look at over the last 14 months. And the Saints, to be sure, are better for it. Which is why Rams-Saints should be one of the most compelling games of the 2018 season.
 

RamBall

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Just rewatched last years game, the Rams were in control of that game from the start. I dont see NO being able to stop Gurley and the passing game, maybe one or the other but not both. Maybe some pitches to Gurley, he reminds me of ED when he takes the pitch and outruns the D to the corner and gets to the secondary. I'd like to see Cooks get some deep shots and torch his former team that traded him because they didnt want to pay him. Peters needs to stay focused and not watch Brees so much. Gurley will have a big day as usual, torching that NO D that wont be the top ranked run D after tomorrow.
 

LesBaker

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For those who read my posts its known that I have been advocating the use of CL outside for sometime. I was thinking that once Mark Barron had returned to the starting ILB 'er lineup that would be the case. But as usual nothing is as simple.

I remember that, good call. He's a real gem.

One thing I have never seen is AD get worn down.

Yup and his conditioning makes opponents pay late in games.

Had that not happened, I would give AR at least a 50/50 chance of pulling out the win, probably better. Rams only "lucky" win of the season?

Well the fact is he probably would not have pulled it off. The fail rate is pretty high even for him.

There was a stat that with a short clock against an undefeated team he had never won in 35 tries. It was on twitter so take it for what it's worth.

Just rewatched last years game, the Rams were in control of that game from the start.

I posted the highlight film and it was about 3 Rams highlights or maybe 4 to one of the Saints. You're right the game wasn't as close as the score.
 

kmramsfan

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Hahahaha!
What if his "weird puckered butthole mouth" pooped on his play sheet.
I want the Rams to run up the score like they did for Fish and Williams a couple of years ago. That game STILL chaps my hide.
Lay one on ole puckered cat's ass face for me, boys. In THEIR place.
 

EastRam

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The thing I've noticed about this Rams team is how even keel they are.

Almost every team we have played this season come out all fired up on adrenaline. As the game wears on, their adrenaline wanes and the Rams just steadily go about their business and gut punch them and notch another W.

The GSOE team was the same way.

Strap on their gear and go to work.

Gotta love it
 

Legatron4

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The thing I've noticed about this Rams team is how even keel they are.

Almost every team we have played this season come out all fired up on adrenaline. As the game wears on, their adrenaline wanes and the Rams just steadily go about their business and gut punch them and notch another W.

The GSOE team was the same way.

Strap on their gear and go to work.

Gotta love it
I’ve noticed that as well. We just wear teams down. And with a target on our back, it’s even more impressive.
 

DeaconJ

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Here's a reminder for 'ol pussy-mouth of where he and the fans could be....hopefully after Sunday!

saints-fansjpg-5333390047b13c3d.jpg
 

FarNorth

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Well, in fairness, GB had the ball at the end of the fourth with over 2 minutes left, 1 timeout, down by only 2 points, and coughed it up on the KO return. Had that not happened, I would give AR at least a 50/50 chance of pulling out the win, probably better. Rams only "lucky" win of the season?
If Gurley had run the ball in for a td at the end for a 36-27 score, and covered the spread in Vegas and fantasyland, the talking heads would have been much more impressed. In most people's minds it wouldn't have been a close game. In the age of a limitless deluge of info we never fail to mistake perception for reality.
 

Ram65

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This.
Falcons game could have gone either way too. Baltimore as well.
We’ve been a bit fortunate ourselves.
I’ve never understood how anyone gets upset at what the talking heads say. Nothing personal, just doesn’t make sense to me. I couldn’t care less what they say, whether it be good or bad.

Hey I agree with a Saints fan.

I'll play the bad guy for a sec.

We've had 3 games where you could say we could have lost as well. "Almost" losing in the NFL isn't a bad thing. It's not college. Winning close games is actually a sign of a good team.

Again I agree.

Two good teams going to go toe to toe. Let's see which one prevails. While a win helps eat team for home field playoff advantage many times the winner doesn't win in a second playoff meeting.
 

Prime Time

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The premise of this article is that " big people beat up little people." I would counter that with "speed kills." The article also claims that Saints players are not only bigger than Rams players but also faster. In my experience a shorter, lighter man can usually outrun a bigger, heavier man. But that's just me.

Plus when matched up against a bigger, stronger opponent, there are certain strategies which can be used to come out victorious. I'm guessing McVay and Phillips have already implemented those strategies into their game plan.
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https://www.canalstreetchronicles.c...thanks-changes-payton-made-after-return-in-13

Bigger, Faster, Stronger: Saints’ have advantage vs Rams thanks to changes Payton made after return in 13’.
The Los Angeles Rams have a team full of “exceptions” and that bodes well for New Orleans
By ElliasJWilliams

It’s been said that the Rams are like a younger version of the Saints, specifically they borrow from the 06-09 iterations of the team.

From the 09’ team the dynamic between Wade Phillips and Sean McVay is very easily comparable to that of Asshole Face and Gregg Williams in that all are aggressive coaches.

Well minus the drama

Offensively they are lead by a young gun slinger in Jared Goff who has a knack for getting the ball to the open receivers that McVay schemes up within his system, and is adept at pushing the ball downfield on the called shot plays.

Heck, one Todd Gurley equals the combination of a healthy 06’ Deuce McCallister and Reggie Bush.

Defensively they are lead by a talented defensive line that is headlined by star defensive tackle Aaron Donald who wrecks games in a way that former Saints 1st round pick Sedrick Ellis was meant to.

I almost feel like Blades tagline fits here “All of their strengths, but none of their weaknesses”.

Keyword there is ALMOST

Inherently they actually suffer from a few of the same issues New Orleans suffered through during that time and the biggest issue is their lack of size, and simply put - big people beat up little people.

In the midst of his bounty gate suspension Sean would have a conversation with mentor Bill Parcells and return with a bigger, faster, stronger mantra as it pertained to drafting and free agent acquisitions.

Every now and again New Orleans will make an exception(Brandin Cooks and Sheldon Rankins), but it’s rare because, as Parcells often said, if you let a few in, pretty soon you’ll have a team full of them. In order for an “exception” to win them over he must have an overwhelming trait available that compensates for what would be considered short comings (no pun intended).

In respects to the aforementioned, it would be speed for Cooks, and intelligence/character for Rankins and as it pertains to the former he is now the feature wide receiver on a Los Angeles Rams team who’s cup runneth over with exceptions.

He joins Robert Woods (both under 200 lbs) as undersized speed threats on the offensive side of the ball. Conversely, New Orleans doesn’t have a corner on the roster under 6’0 195 lbs with the exception of Crawley.

That same problem also manifest on the defensive side of the ball where both Rams’ inside line backers Mark Barron (a former safety) and Corey Littleton barely tip the scales at 230 lbs. Aaron Donald, while amazing, is only 290 lbs (small for a defensive tackle) and their free safety Lemarcus Joyner is 5’8 191.

I’ll say it again, big people beat up little people.

Payton’s teams of old were considered finesse for a reason and while a lot of it had to do with style of play there was a tiny singe of it that had to do with how the team was built. They just weren’t physically imposing to go along with not really playing a physical brand of football.

It was those teams that would go against NFC North or AFC North squads like the Bears and Ravens and get squashed because stylistically they weren’t great matches.

Guess what brand of ball the Rams play?

Am I saying it’s a significant advantage? No...because there are guys like Cooks (who burned Rams for 2 TD’s in 2016), Barry Sanders, Darren Sproles, Sam Mills, and Tyrann Mathieu that make you look at and value smaller players a differently

Still, David triumphing over Goliath is such a miraculous tale simply because the feat doesn’t happen very much.

https://www.canalstreetchronicles.c...s-saints-vs-los-angeles-rams-bold-predictions

New Orleans Saints vs Los Angeles Rams: Bold Predictions
Here are our bold predictions - what are yours?
By Chris Dunnells

It’s a pretty common occurrence for fans and analysts to make bold predictions about a game or season. If the prediction doesn’t come true, then that’s OK - you said it was bold! If it DOES come true, though... now you look like a genius!

So in that spirit, some of the Canal Street Chronicles writers were asked to share with me a bold prediction or two for the Week 9 of the regular season for the New Orleans Saints: a battle of offensive juggernauts, a fight against the offensive juggernaut that is the Los Angeles Rams. This is their chance to look brilliant!

Here are a few of the bold predictions provided by some of the contributors at Canal Street Chronicles:
  • Below Average - Rams are held to less than 30 points. (Chad)
  • Back-to-Back - PJ Williams has his second straight game with an interception. (Chris)
  • By Air - Alvin Kamara has over 100 receiving yards. (Don)
  • Not my MVP - Todd Gurley is held under 100 rushing yards. (Chad)
  • Apple of our Eye - Eli Apple records his first interception in New Orleans. (Bob)
  • Taysom Time - Taysom Hill is the only Saints QB to throw for a TD in the win. (Tee)
  • Big D - Saints defense scores a touchdown. (Chad)
  • Rookie Dominance - Tre’Quan Smith has over 100 receiving yards. (Don)
  • Sack City - Saints D sacks Jared Goff 4 times. (Bob)
Here are my three bold predictions for the game:
  • Over 80 total points are scored this week by the two teams.
  • There isn’t a single turnover by either team.
  • Teddy Bridgewater completes a pass.
 

Loyal

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The premise of this article is that " big people beat up little people." I would counter that with "speed kills." The article also claims that Saints players are not only bigger than Rams players but also faster. In my experience a shorter, lighter man can usually outrun a bigger, heavier man. But that's just me.

Plus when matched up against a bigger, stronger opponent, there are certain strategies which can be used to come out victorious. I'm guessing McVay and Phillips have already implemented those strategies into their game plan.
*****************************************************************************************
https://www.canalstreetchronicles.c...thanks-changes-payton-made-after-return-in-13

Bigger, Faster, Stronger: Saints’ have advantage vs Rams thanks to changes Payton made after return in 13’.
The Los Angeles Rams have a team full of “exceptions” and that bodes well for New Orleans
By ElliasJWilliams

It’s been said that the Rams are like a younger version of the Saints, specifically they borrow from the 06-09 iterations of the team.

From the 09’ team the dynamic between Wade Phillips and Sean McVay is very easily comparable to that of Asshole Face and Gregg Williams in that all are aggressive coaches.

Well minus the drama

Offensively they are lead by a young gun slinger in Jared Goff who has a knack for getting the ball to the open receivers that McVay schemes up within his system, and is adept at pushing the ball downfield on the called shot plays.

Heck, one Todd Gurley equals the combination of a healthy 06’ Deuce McCallister and Reggie Bush.

Defensively they are lead by a talented defensive line that is headlined by star defensive tackle Aaron Donald who wrecks games in a way that former Saints 1st round pick Sedrick Ellis was meant to.

I almost feel like Blades tagline fits here “All of their strengths, but none of their weaknesses”.

Keyword there is ALMOST

Inherently they actually suffer from a few of the same issues New Orleans suffered through during that time and the biggest issue is their lack of size, and simply put - big people beat up little people.

In the midst of his bounty gate suspension Sean would have a conversation with mentor Bill Parcells and return with a bigger, faster, stronger mantra as it pertained to drafting and free agent acquisitions.

Every now and again New Orleans will make an exception(Brandin Cooks and Sheldon Rankins), but it’s rare because, as Parcells often said, if you let a few in, pretty soon you’ll have a team full of them. In order for an “exception” to win them over he must have an overwhelming trait available that compensates for what would be considered short comings (no pun intended).

In respects to the aforementioned, it would be speed for Cooks, and intelligence/character for Rankins and as it pertains to the former he is now the feature wide receiver on a Los Angeles Rams team who’s cup runneth over with exceptions.

He joins Robert Woods (both under 200 lbs) as undersized speed threats on the offensive side of the ball. Conversely, New Orleans doesn’t have a corner on the roster under 6’0 195 lbs with the exception of Crawley.

That same problem also manifest on the defensive side of the ball where both Rams’ inside line backers Mark Barron (a former safety) and Corey Littleton barely tip the scales at 230 lbs. Aaron Donald, while amazing, is only 290 lbs (small for a defensive tackle) and their free safety Lemarcus Joyner is 5’8 191.

I’ll say it again, big people beat up little people.

Payton’s teams of old were considered finesse for a reason and while a lot of it had to do with style of play there was a tiny singe of it that had to do with how the team was built. They just weren’t physically imposing to go along with not really playing a physical brand of football.

It was those teams that would go against NFC North or AFC North squads like the Bears and Ravens and get squashed because stylistically they weren’t great matches.

Guess what brand of ball the Rams play?

Am I saying it’s a significant advantage? No...because there are guys like Cooks (who burned Rams for 2 TD’s in 2016), Barry Sanders, Darren Sproles, Sam Mills, and Tyrann Mathieu that make you look at and value smaller players a differently

Still, David triumphing over Goliath is such a miraculous tale simply because the feat doesn’t happen very much.

https://www.canalstreetchronicles.c...s-saints-vs-los-angeles-rams-bold-predictions

New Orleans Saints vs Los Angeles Rams: Bold Predictions
Here are our bold predictions - what are yours?
By Chris Dunnells

It’s a pretty common occurrence for fans and analysts to make bold predictions about a game or season. If the prediction doesn’t come true, then that’s OK - you said it was bold! If it DOES come true, though... now you look like a genius!

So in that spirit, some of the Canal Street Chronicles writers were asked to share with me a bold prediction or two for the Week 9 of the regular season for the New Orleans Saints: a battle of offensive juggernauts, a fight against the offensive juggernaut that is the Los Angeles Rams. This is their chance to look brilliant!

Here are a few of the bold predictions provided by some of the contributors at Canal Street Chronicles:
  • Below Average - Rams are held to less than 30 points. (Chad)
  • Back-to-Back - PJ Williams has his second straight game with an interception. (Chris)
  • By Air - Alvin Kamara has over 100 receiving yards. (Don)
  • Not my MVP - Todd Gurley is held under 100 rushing yards. (Chad)
  • Apple of our Eye - Eli Apple records his first interception in New Orleans. (Bob)
  • Taysom Time - Taysom Hill is the only Saints QB to throw for a TD in the win. (Tee)
  • Big D - Saints defense scores a touchdown. (Chad)
  • Rookie Dominance - Tre’Quan Smith has over 100 receiving yards. (Don)
  • Sack City - Saints D sacks Jared Goff 4 times. (Bob)
Here are my three bold predictions for the game:
  • Over 80 total points are scored this week by the two teams.
  • There isn’t a single turnover by either team.
  • Teddy Bridgewater completes a pass.
Yeah, I’ll take “small” Aaron Donald over anyone....Can’t believe he was used as an example...lol
 
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