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"Scrimmage" report, 8/7/15
RamView, August 7, 2015
Training Camp Report
from
Lindenwood University
Pretty
typical Rams “scrimmage” of the past seven years, with the
defense way ahead of an out-of-sync offense that has work to do in
just about every phase. Let's hope this is the year the Rams prove it
really is too early right now to judge how the offense is going to
play, because there's getting to be kind of a track record.
* QB: Nick Foles
attempted some throws I'd better not see him try again this
preseason, let alone the regular season. He threw some nice short
passes into tight coverage, usually to Jared Cook, but threw several
into coverage downfield that never should have left his hand. The
qualifier – he probably would have gotten sacked on most of those
throws and probably was just giving a receiver a chance to make a
play. Hard to tell. Foles did not get many strong pockets. At least
one of those seemed to be his own fault for not adjusting protection
to the side of the formation the blitz was (obviously) coming from.
From one rare solid pocket Foles did get, he tried to force a short
ball to a well-covered Cook and got it broken up and intercepted. He
also missed Cook and Stedman Bailey on corner routes. Too many throws
he shouldn't have made, and should have made, to give Foles a high
grade tonight. And I never got to see him take a shot deep. On the
plus side, Foles made a terrific play-fake to set up a slant to
Stedman Bailey for a big gain to open 11-on-11. I was looking right
at it and would swear he gave the ball to Benny Cunningham and then
took it back from him. I have an established bias, but Austin Davis
looked like the best of the backups, which goes hand-in-hand with him
getting the most solid pockets to throw from. At the same time, he
hung in well and delivered from collapsing pockets several times,
including a red zone TD to Isaiah Pead. Case Keenum's first 11-on-11
throw was a one-hopper on a two-yard quick hitch, and I kind of tuned
him out after that. Davis and Keenum aren't supposedly that different
in size but Keenum seems to play much smaller. I would say they both
had some accuracy issues in 7-on-7. Disappointingly, Sean Mannion
only got to work with the rookies and only got to rush a couple of
bad throws, one of which should have been picked off. If Foles (and
the rest of the offense) are still getting dialed in at this point,
fine. But there can't be many performances like this one for the Rams
to go anywhere in the regular season. I don't think any of the
11-on-11 “drives” led to a TD.
* RB: The
offense ran almost nothing but pass plays (which could have been part
of their problem), so not a lot of action here. Especially with Tre
Mason out due to hamstring tightness and Todd Gurley glued to the
sideline running 60-yard shuttles. That made Benny Cunningham RB1,
with Pead and Trey Watts taking turns at RB2, which sure looks like
an elevation for Pead to me. Watts had the best run of the night, a
20-yard TD run where he read the defense perfectly, bounced the run
outside and had no one left on his side of the field who could catch
him. He did drop an easy dumpoff pass in 11-on-11, though. Pead
seemed to get the most carries but didn't appear to break off
anything big, usually running wide. Nobody got anywhere up the
middle. No fullback section this week but Justice Cunningham looked a
lot better blocking 1-on-1 than I thought he looked last week. I
think he was the only guy who blocked Ethan Westbrooks all night.
* Receivers: Kenny
Britt got the night off. Stedman Bailey got Britt's starter's reps
and flashed some of his form from last training camp. He is yet to
return to that level, though. Jared Cook is clearly Foles' #1 target,
and this scrimmage was like a typical game for Cook. Enough short
catches to make you think he's got something going, then an annoying
drop. Tavon Austin didn't have a really productive scrimmage
personally, but more on that later. He got stripped after a red zone
catch near the goal line but fell on the ball. Brian Quick had
another groan-inducing drop. His drops I've seen have come in the
middle of the field where contact would be waiting for him. He looks
confident and catches well at the sideline. I hope he can lose the
no-contact beanie pretty soon, I think the idea that he can't go all
out is affecting his game mentally. The longer the dropped passes
continue, the more it looks like he's had a setback compared to last
year's near-breakout. The sleeper receiver of this pretty-sleepy
group could be Lance Kendricks. He's quietly playing well, running
good, smooth routes and catching well. There's not much pressure from
the bottom of the depth chart. Chris Givens showed nice acceleration
taking a quick route for 20. Bradley Marquez made a nice sliding
catch. The last play of 11-on-11, I hoped they would put something up
for Isiah Ferguson, who's 6'5” with a 40-something vertical, and
Davis did put one up deep... and Ferguson broke off his route. They
don't drop anything in warmups, but I'm ready to get consistently
sharper play out of this unit.
* O-line: The struggle was real tonight for the
offensive line, which had a lot of trouble with the d-line's speed
and committed at least five false starts. I thought Rob Havenstein
got called for 1 or 2. Garrett Reynolds got one for sure, because he
got pulled. Havenstein and Jamon Brown and Greg Robinson all had
difficulty with speed rushes 1-on-1. Robinson's difficulty continued
in 11-on-11; I figure Robert Quinn for 3 sacks. Not only was Foles
was under persistent pressure from the front four, at least a couple
of blitzers would have gotten to him completely unblocked. The night
in a nutshell: Foles drops back. Quinn would have sacked him. Foles
scrambles over to Quinn's side. William Hayes would have tracked him
down. Foles fires a pass into downfield coverage, nearly picked off.
It'll be a long season for Rams fans, though a short one for Foles,
if these struggles continue. You know how they say, if you have two
starting QBs, you don't have one? What does that make three centers?
Negative one? Demetrius Rhaney was actually with the ones tonight,
which to me is a pretty big stretch. Michael Brockers just ran over
him in 1-on-1, the middle run game got nowhere, and there were blitz
protection and timing problems all night. Tim Barnes was C2, Barrett
Jones C3, with some action as the goal line TE. Jones got driven back
to the QB by Westbrooks on a late pass but held up much better in the
run game. The second line did the best job pass-protecting and
picking up blitzes. So, yeah, of course I can't remember that unit,
other than Barnes and Reynolds, listed as a guard but playing RT.
Andrew Donnal's listed as a T but played guard. The line highlight of
the night was probably Rodger Saffold holding his own against Aaron
Donald 1-on-1. Beyond that, though, gotta go to work. I'm sure a much
more even run-pass balance than tonight's will help.
* Defensive line: The
star backup of the night was Ethan Westbrooks; nearly every single
rep he had was good. He was nearly unblockable, spent a lot of the
practice in the backfield, and he was doing it all from defensive
tackle, often right over the nose. He looked so good at DT (granted,
he didn't have to stop many runs) I don't see why the Rams couldn't
go with 8 on the d-line on the final roster and just use him all
over. Robert Quinn had a dominating night pass-rushing. Aaron Donald
nearly beat Pead to a handoff to blow up one run. Chris Long sat out
again, but Sack City looks like it's open for business.
* Linebackers: A
strong outing for the LB unit as well. Akeem Ayers really “flashed”
here as an all-around LB. He was very effective blitzing, and made an
excellent play in coverage in the red zone. He ended up with zone
responsibility for Tavon, and Foles tried to exploit it, but Ayers
not only stuck to his man, he stripped the ball loose. Ayers'
athleticism is really showing for me now. Alec Ogletree had
skin-tight coverage and broke up a pass for Cook that resulted in a
Janoris Jenkins INT. Marshall McFadden picked off a pass in 7-on-7.
Jo-Lonn Dunbar, though, got beat for the Pead red zone TD. Daren
Bates continued to look good as an edge run defender. Bryce Hager
blew up a run in the rookie session and continues to look good with
that group. You're going to have to fight him and me to keep him off
this team somewhere.
* Secondary: Tonight's
practice has me gaining confidence in this group, even with E.J.
Gaines out due to a foot injury. Maurice Alexander was also out.
Janoris Jenkins, though, seems to be at the top of his game. He had
an interception off a deflection, a nice pass breakup in 7-on-7,
solid coverage all night and Foles basically wouldn't throw at him.
Trumaine Johnson also had a nice 7-on-7 breakup. The smaller
receivers made catches in front of him in soft coverage, which is
pretty much what you're going to get from TruJo. Lamarcus Joyner
looked very sticky in coverage; I believe he had coverage on the deep
corner to Bailey that just missed. Cody Davis did a nice job bringing
deep help on that play. Speaking of bringing it, Mark Barron
delivered the biggest pop of the night on a run play. Jacob Hagen
looked good in run support with the rookies, but Montell Garner
completely muffed a very catchable interception opportunity.
* Special teams: The
special teams highlights were a Brandon Washington “kickoff return
TD” and the return of Legatron. Greg Zuerlein hit everything once
again, which included squeaking a 64-yard
FG over the crossbar. Also, Johnny Hekker throwing 40-yard passes in
warmups. He was the Rams' most clutch QB last season, after all.
* Strategery: A
lot of work on the passing game tonight, probably tilted
three-to-one. There weren't many plays run for Tavon, but there were
several Tavon plays run. There's a too-cute-by-half fake flanker
end-around that turns into a pass to the flanker in the flat. I guess
the idea is the defense takes their eyes off him when they recognize
the fake. There was a quick hitch thrown against the grain that gave
Givens room to take off for 20. Foles exploited soft coverage by
TruJo and hit Tavon with a quick slant for a nice gain. He had Tavon
iso'ed on Ayers another time but Ayers made a fine play. The
play-action to Bailey out of the slot that opened 11-on-11 is a play
Tavon easily could take to the house. Foles was definitely looking
for Tavon, and the Rams definitely have plays drawn up to take
advantage of Tavon, though he wasn't always the one running them
tonight. The best bit of trickery was Barrett Jones running a route
in the end zone out of the goal line jumbo package, but Davis
hesitated to pull the trigger on that and hit Bailey for the TD
instead.
|
DRONE! |
* Cheers: This
looked pretty easily like the lowest-attended of the Lindenwood
scrimmages, thanks in part to the inconvenient Friday-at-5:00
starting time. Lucky for me my boss is a big Rams fan and let me
knock off a little early. The shady press-box side of the stadium was
packed, but the other three sections were pretty sparsely populated.
I'd guess 4,000-4,500. I'm pretty sure it's been over 7,000 in the
past when it was held later and on a Saturday. Unlike past times
here, I had little trouble getting a good parking spot or getting out
afterward. I saw no “Keep the Rams” signs, which I understand
were banned from Rams Park while NFL Network was there this week. I
couldn't say whether they were banned tonight. Not banned tonight:
DRONES. There was a quadcopter hovering over the field, though I
don't know who was operating it. Either the Rams or Bill Belichick.
* What's next?: That'll do it for RamView's
training camp coverage. Heck, that about does it for training camp in
St. Louis; the last one fans here can attend is Tuesday, then the
Rams go to play Oakland Friday, and then on to, well, you know. The
Rams shellacked the Raiders 52-0 last regular season, and the Silver
and Black has not likely forgotten that, which could make for some
interesting moments. (OMG, I just remembered they have Ray-Ray
Armstrong. Get your penalty flags ready.) The main thing to watch for
the Rams is how well the offensive line is coming together and that
there aren't any major injuries. With starters likely to go a quarter
at the most, I doubt anything else out of this game will be
important. Let's get the 2015 season off to an effective, healthy
start.
-- Mike
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