Tuesday, January 7, 2025

TUESDAY TIDBITS: Which Team Earns the Label "Road Warriors"

By TJ Troup 
Just finished doing my yearly podcast for Matthew DiBiase and his show "The Packaged Tourist" where we play out a mythical Super Bowl. This year was the 1964 Buffalo Bills against the Cleveland Browns in Tulane Stadium. After 272 regular season games we begin the tournament. 

Hopefully you are not tired of hearing me ramble on each year about the simple fact that every year since the Wild Card began there has been at least one road victory. 

Ok,folks who wins on the road this year? 

Does not have to be this weekend, yet really believe the Houston Texans will be challenged by the Chargers, and the Rams will have a difficult time beating the Vikings twice in one season.

 The last time the Detroit Lions finished first in the defensive passer rating category was 1954, and with a rating of 82.0 they demonstrated vast improvement over last year in defending the pass. 

Last summer purchased "Lindy's Pro Football" magazine and Howard Balzer wrote up his predictions for the year. Very easy to criticize his picks, yet his write-up for the AFC North is without a doubt a failure. He "picked" the Steelers to finish 4th and last, and the Browns to finish 2nd. While the Bears, Jets, and Jaguars are directionless—the Cleveland Browns are a major disappointment. 
The look on Myles Garrett's face on the bench late in the game tells all. The superb analysis by Orlovsky and Riddick during the broadcast shed light on the sad state in Cleveland. Stefanski keeps his job, and he dismisses some of his assistants as scapegoats. How damn sad. Just damn sad, since the Browns quarterback is in the playoffs with a home game for the Buccaneers. Oh, Baker Mayfield is not on Cleveland? 
Baker Mayfield
Though I could write a book the size of "War & Peace" on the cuddly little soft bears of Chicago, I will make one last statement. My favorite Bears player is in Baltimore at linebacker. Baltimore continues to make superb player personnel decisions, while the Browns could have made the Bears an offer to acquire Mr. Smith. 
Roquan Smith
Enjoy the games this weekend.

Monday, January 6, 2025

2024 Pro Football Journal All-Rookie Team

 By Chris Willis, NFL Films
Jaylen Daniels (left) and Jared Verse (right)
Once again, we present our annual All-Rookie team, selected by Chris Willis, the Head of the NFL Films Producer, the Head of the Research Library, and the resident historian there as well.

OROY – Jayden Daniels, QB, Washington Commanders
DROY – Jared Verse, EDGE, Los Angeles Rams

Straight from Heaven: The 2024 All-Madden Team

 By John Turney 
If John Madden were to choose his All-Madden team this season, what would it look like? 

Holy cow!  We're coming to the end of another great pro football season. It's crunch time! Playoff time! The time of the year when we see great players in meaningful games. And it's what I love about the NFL!

The NFL honors me by putting my face on a patch that players have sewn on their jerseys for Thanksgiving games. And now I get to honor those players by putting them on my annual All-Madden team.

Back in 1984, my boyhood friend John Robinson said that I oughta pick a team of my kind of guys. Not an All-Pro team. He was talking about something else, and I knew what he meant: Pick a team of guys who played the game the way I liked it; guys I would want to coach. Some were All-Pros, some were just good football players.

The Network where I worked then -- CBS -- heard the pitch, agreed to do it and a tradition was born. So, let's keep it going.

Here, then, are My Guys --  the All-Madden team for 2024.

OFFENSIVE LINE

I was a lineman, and that's who I relate to most on a football field. They're also the biggest guys on the team and have as much heart as anyone. They're the smartest, too, and always have the cleanest lockers. An offensive lineman has to be meticulous on and off the field.

Most of them have bad bodies. Maybe a bit of a belly hanging over the top of their pants or a big butt ... you know, guys like Art Shell or Dan Dierdorf. Back then, they formed a union and called it Brotherhood United of Bad Bodies of America.

"B.U.B.B.A." for short.

But you know what? There are not a lot of B.U.B.B.A.-type guys this year. I didn't go with road graders. In fact, compared to my usual guys, this year's linemen are svelt!  The closest to a B.U.B.B.A. on this year's All-Madden team is the Lions' Penei Sewell at 335 pounds. But he's athletic. He's someone who can run block and pass block and do all those things. But he's so more than that.

He can catch a pass. Heck, he can THROW a pass. And don't be surprised if he completes one in the Super Bowl this year. The Lions are good enough to get there, and this guy can do it.

My other tackle is Lane Johnson of the Eagles. "WAIT!" You say, "Johnson and Sewell are both right tackles, you can't do that!"

Yes, I can. It's my team!

The left tackle, right tackle thing doesn't mean as much as it used to. Why? Because all the great edge rushers play both sides these days. Myles Garrett, Maxx Crosby, Nick Bosa, T.J. Watt -- almost all of them. No one plays just one side. So all tackles have to be able to face anything or anyone. 

On the All-Madden team, Penei can move to the left side. Tristan Wirfs, a Pro Bowl right tackle, did it last year and is a fine left tackle now. Trust me, Penei can play either side. The great ones can, and Penei is a great one.

As for Lane Johnson, he could play left tackle, too. He could also play tight end. Or guard. He was a quarterback in college, so, like Penei Sewell, he could still throw a pass ... or take a snap and run up the middle if he had to.
Penei Sewell (left) and Lane Johnson (right)
Need a guard? Joe Thuney of the Kansas City Chiefs is one of best. Need a tackle to fill in for a hurt guy? Joe can do it. He could probably snap for you, too. He's not a B.U.B.B.A., either, but he's one of my All-Madden guards. 

For my other guard, I want Chris Lindstrom of Atlanta. He reminds me of John Hannah. John was one of the greatest guards in NFL history, and he could do it all. But once in a while, he'd whiff on a pass rusher. Maybe he tried a short set and someone got to him a little bit. Lindstrom is like that. But it's worth the risk because what John wanted to do and what Chris wants to do is to smack those rushers in the mouth. And almost all the time they get it done. So the one or two times they miss, it's worth the risk.

That's the price for wanting to make defenders pay. Gimme Chris Lindstrom any day, just like I would have wanted John Hannah. 

My center is Cam Jurgens of the Philadelphia Eagles. Yeah, I know Jason Kelce is gone, and this guy isn't Kelce. Maybe maybe not yet. But lightning can strike twice. Mickey Mantle replaced Joe DiMaggio. When Deacon Jones left the Rams, Jack Youngblood stepped in. After Brett Favre, the Packers had Aaron Rodgers. Joe Montana to Steve Young in San Francisco, you know what I mean? 

I think that kinda thing is what's happened with Philly at the center position. Like Jason, Cam can lead block, get to the second level on an inside zone or duo block -- the whole deal. Also, he can dig people out on the "Tush Push" like Jason Kelce did. Yep, history is repeating itself at the center position in Philadelphia because Cam Jurgens is outstanding and will get better. 

But I want someone else on my All-Madden team, another offensive lineman and that's Dan Skipper, the big ol' tackle from the Lions. You have to have a backup around in case someone gets hurt ... you know, a sixth offensive lineman. And if that guy can play anywhere you want him to, that's a plus. 

Skipper is always on the ready. The guy will line up and lead block for a running back. He will line up at tight end. He will do either of these and then add to it by going in motion. He will line up far to the outside, like a wide receiver, and make the cornerback think "What the heck is going on here?"  Dan Campbell asks him to do the darndest things, and Skipper does all of it.

At 6-foot-9 and over 330 pounds, Dan Skipper is as big as a hotel. And speaking of hotels, I always stayed at a Ramada Inn. You get a great room and a great price, and you could rely on it, just like the Lions can rely on Skipper's versatility. He's the kind of guy that makes football fun, and the All-Madden needs a guy like him. Because football is supposed to be fun.

BACKS and ENDS

There are a few quarterbacks I like. I love Lamar Jackson. But I picked him for All-Madden last year. Josh Allen may be the MVP, if it isn't Jackson, and he's great, too. But this year, for my team, I'm going with Joe Burrow as my All-Madden quarterback. The guy is Joe Namath. His release, his arm, his toughness. All of those things Joe Burrow has.
Joe Burrow
People don't realize the things Joe Willie could do because they look at his stats. But when you saw him play ... when you asked guys like Willie Brown about facing Joe Namath ... you'd know just how good Joe Namath was. And now, I see Joe Burrow doing the same things.

Off the field, he dresses like a dandy -- just like Broadway Joe. Hey, you have to have a PR guy on every team, and on my team Joe Burrow is that guy, the guy who tells people  "We look good".  And if it's passing the ball or wearing stylish clothes, Joe Burrow looks good.

The glamor boys are easy this year -- Ja'Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson. Period. Jefferson makes cuts like most receivers fantasize about, and Chase ... what a perfect name because usually defensive backs are chasing him.

But in today's NFL, you need three receivers. Who's my third? The guy who reminds me of Gary Clark, who played in Washington. Terry McLaurin is that guy, and he's in Washington, too. Every year, Terry catches 70 or more passes and gets his 1,000 yards and makes a living making clutch catches in clutch moments. He's the ideal complement to Jefferson and Chase.

They are my there wide receivers this year.

At tight end, I'm going with George Kittle. He can catch. He can block. And if your young kicker misses a crucial kick, Kittle's the kind of teammate you want. He will take that kid aside and tell him that he believes in him and that the youngster should believe in himself. 

I tell you what: I believe in George Kittle.

I cannot remember a year when two running backs had such big years in the SAME year. When I coached, there were lots of backs who had Pro Bowl years or who were worthy of being All-Pro. But this year is different. There are two running backs who have carried the ball over 300 times and average almost six yards a carry. SIX!

Maybe that's happened before, but, if it has, I sure don't recall it.

Saquon Barkley of the Eagles has run for 2,000 yards and was unstoppable at times, and the Ravens' heavy-duty back, Derrick Henry, was also unstoppable when he got it rolling. The All-Pro voters have to choose one. I don't. I'm picking them both. 

Don't be surprised. Hey, one year I picked seven nose tackles to be on my All-Madden team. So I can pick two running backs if I want to. And I want to.
Saquon Barkley (left) and Derrick Henry (right)
Saquon can start and make guys miss. Then I'll put Derrick Henry in to plow over them and salt the game away. Henry will just throw them to the ground with that stiff arm of his. It's a stiff arm Jim Brown would be proud of. Every year several guys just get thwapped to the ground with a Derrick Henry stiff arm. I love seeing it, but, believe me, defenders hate it.

But they can't stop it. 

And if you think it's a cop-out to pick two running backs, then you really won't like this:  I'm picking four running backs because I'm picking two fullbacks to go with my two running backs. Yep, you heard me -- two fullbacks.

They're two special fullbacks because they're both former defensive linemen. Who am I talking about? It's Patrick Ricard of the Ravens and Scott Matlock of the Chargers. They both play fullback, tight end and H-back and will knock the snot out of defenders. Not only that, but you can stick them in on goal-line and short-yardage defense if you want. I mean, after all, once you're a defensive tackle you will always have a little defensive tackle in you. 

SPECIALISTS

Brandon Aubrey is my kicker. Anyone who can bomb them from where he does and as consistently as he does deserves it. I have usually gone with Justin Tucker, but he had an off year. It happens to the best of them. But this year, it's Aubrey who gets the nod on the All-Madden team.

My return guy is KaVontae Turpin of Dallas. He can return kicks and punts and can run the ball. I'd love to see him take more snaps as a wildcat quarterback. You want the ball in his hands because, when he does, he's a threat to go all the way.

Who's my punter? No one.  We're going to go for it every time ... unless we let Brandon Aubrey nail a 60-yard field goal. We don't need a punter. We're aggressive on my team. And if there's no other choice and we have to punt, then I'd yell at Brandon Aubrey, "Hey! Get out there and pretend you're Ray Guy."

We'd be fine.

DEFENSE

On defense, my interior guys are Chis Jones and Cameron Heyward. Heyward plays for the Pittsburgh Steelers, and Jones is the leader of the Kansas City Chiefs' defense. Chis Jones reminds me of a guy I used to have on the Raiders named Otis Sistrunk. Let me tell you a story. 

The year we won the Super Bowl, I had to move Otis from a 4-3 defensive tackle to  a 3-4 defensive end because we had so many defensive linemen hurt. We figured that, since we have four good linebackers and only a few defensive linemen, we'll just change the scheme. 

But being in a 3-4 was hard for Otis. It's a tough position. You have to go nose-to-nose with an offensive tackle. It's not a position any good pass rusher wants to be in. But, for the good of the team, Otis did it ... just like the Marine he was. 

When he first got to the Raiders and for the next four years, he was a 6-6 defensive tackle. And he was good one. He would overwhelm people with his size and quickness and sack quarterbacks in bunches. That's Chris Jones, who's also a tall, overpowering defensive tackle who wreaks havoc on an offense.
Cam Heyward
Cam Heyward is like Old Man River. Or, should I say Old Man Three Rivers. Like all of them, he just keeps moving on, steady and powerful. He had a down year last year, and no one was sure if the Steelers were going to keep him. He'd been dealing with an injury. But this year, he's All-Madden and will probably be All-Pro because he's back to his old self.

You can't run at him. Teams never could. You can't run around him. Teams never could. Quarterbacks cannot get away from him. They never could.  Offensive coordinators around the league write this note to themselves when they face the Steelers, "Cam Heyward is a problem, and we need to get him blocked." They never did.

When you talk about tough, you have to include 49ers' linebacker Fred Warner. He played most of 2024 with a cracked bone in his ankle. He's tall and swift. He stuffs running backs and deflects passes. He can blitz effectively and can go sideline to sideline. It's crazy to see how much ground he can cover so quickly.

I know, I know, the 49ers' defense was not up to snuff this year. But Fred Warner was up to snuff, and that's why I'm making him my middle linebacker. I'm telling you: He's tougher than "Tough Actin" Tinactin," which is the best thing for athlete's foot, though it won't work on a cracked ankle. 

For my WILL-type backer, I'm going with Zack Baun. He can rush, cover, tackle, hit people, and make balls pop loose. He came from nowhere this year and wasn't even a regular on his old team, the Saints. But with the Eagles? He's been special.

This kid made more tackles this year than his first four combined. He has more sacks this year than his first four years combined. He forced five fumbles this year. He'd never forced a single one in his four years in New Orleans.  His defensive coach, Vic Fangio, has made him a jack-of-all-trades and Baun responded by making as many big plays as any linebacker this year. 

But my linebacking corps needs one more guy. It needs someone who can rotate with my edge linebackers. It needs someone who can also play inside linebacker and rush the passer from the inside on third downs. But he has to drop into short zones, too, and make his presence felt. He even has to cover tight ends man-to-man or step out with one in the slot. And he has to make plays on special teams. You need a kick blocker.

For this year's All-Madden team that someone is Michael Hoecht of the Los Angeles Rams. He started his NFL career as a defensive lineman. Then, in a pinch, they moved him to outside linebacker -- at over 300 pounds. Now he's everywhere, though he weighs probably 30 pounds less. But he's a tool you can use in your base defense or your nickel or your dime-dime defense. Just anything. 
Michael Hoecht
Michael Hoecht is like some of the all-in-one tools you can find at Ace Hardware -- the place with the helpful hardware folks. And to the Rams' defense, Hoecht is a helpful player. Just ask Don Shula's grandson, Chris. He coaches him.

One thing is for certain: Patrick Surtain can cover. And speaking of coverage I always enforced Verizon Wireless. They have the most coverage of anyone -- like Surtain.

My other corner is Derek Stingley Jr., who plays for the Texans. You know, I had so many happy days coaching football and announcing games and very few sad days. But, by far the saddest day I ever had on a football field, is when Derek's grandfather -- Darryl Stingley -- lost nearly everything in a game I was coaching. 

I saw him get hit, and it was a hit that still haunts me. It's wonderful that his grandson has risen to being on the verge of being All-Pro, which he will be ... and probably this year. But he's on my All-Madden team for sure. He's earned it.

At one safety, I want Brian Branch who plays for the Lions. I like him because he can play deep and can step down and play in the slot. And his name is perfect too -- Branch. He will hit you like a tree branch if you're not careful. 

The other safety I'm picking is Budda Baker of the Cardinals. They do so many things with him around the line of scrimmage, and he makes tackles by the Baker's dozen. Get this: He mas more tackles than almost all the linebackers in the NFL. Only Zaire Franklin of the Colts has more. 

Last but not least are the pass rushers. 

They make defenses work because, without them, your secondary would get picked apart, and teams would just run outside, away from the monsters in the middle

Browns' defensive end Myles Garrett is one of my edge guys. When he comes around a corner he bends like Gumby. You'd think he would end up like a pretzel. But he doesn't. They put one guy on him, two guys on him, three guys ... and they still cannot block him.

The Pittsburgh Steelers have long had a tradition at the outside linebacker position, going way back to guys like Kevin Greene, Greg Lloyd, Joey Porter, James Harrison and a bunch more. There are too many to remember all of them, really. But I remember they were all great. 

But T.J. Watt may be the best of the lot. He always plays hard, he gets great pressure on quarterbacks and he gets them on the ground. If he doesn't, it means he's knocked the ball loose. No one forces more fumbles than T.J. Watt. 
T.J. Watt
There it is, my 2024 All-Madden team. These are the guys I want to take into battle and after the game, and these are the guys I'd want to sit down with afterward to enjoy a Lite Beer from Miller.

Sunday, January 5, 2025

Up, Up and Good, Bears Defeat Packers

 By Eric Goska

(photos by Eric Goska)

Who thought the latest installment of Packers-Bears would come down to a kicking competition in the final two minutes?

If so, raise both arms. You, clairvoyant one, and the kicks are good!

Green Bay and Chicago placed the outcome of their latest meeting in the legs of their kickers. Both men delivered, but Chicago prevailed 24-22 at Lambeau Field because its special teams unit had last wraps.

The longest-running rivarly in the NFL is often defined by a seemingly endless roster of iconic players: Nagurski, Nitschke, Butkus, Taylor, Singletary, Favre. Rarely, if ever, do those who apply foot to pigskin merit a mention.

Yet Sunday, the stage was all theirs. When 58 minutes of blocking and tackling failed to separate winner from loser, out trotted Brandon McManus of the Packers and then Cairo Santos of the Bears.

McManus was summoned after Emanuel Wilson was dumped for a 2-yard loss on third down by DeMarcus Walker and Tremaine Edmunds at the Chicago 37. Matt Orzech snapped the ball to holder Daniel Whelan and McManus blasted a 55-yard bomb that put Green Bay ahead 22-21 with 58 seconds remaining.

The kick was the longest successful field goal in the final two minutes by any player in Packers history.

Cue the Bears.

Starting from the Chicago 20, Caleb Williams marshaled his team to the Green Bay 33 in five plays. The rookie quarterback's last act was to spike the ball with two seconds remaining.

Santos’ turn. Scott Daley snapped the ball to holder Tory Taylor and No. 8 drilled a 51-yard field goal as time expired.

And just like that, the Packers’ 11-game winning streak over the Bears went pfttt!

Green Bay has played more than 1,400 regular-season games since joining the professional ranks in 1921. Sunday’s kicking duel was only the 10th time the Packers and their opponents both connected on a field goal in the final two minutes of the same game.

Surprisingly, perhaps, the Bears have been involved in three of those contests. The first, won by Chicago 26-24, took place on Nov. 8, 1987.  Al Del Greco hit from 47 yards out with a minute left and Kevin Butler came through from 52 as time expired. The second, won by Green Bay 30-27, occurred on Dec. 18, 2016. Connor Barth was good from 22 with 1:19 to play before Mason Crosby nailed a 32-yarder at the buzzer.

For McManus, his 55-yard parting shot was his 15th successful field goal in a row. This season he was good on 20 of 21 field goal attempts (95.2 percent), the highest percentage in team history by a player with a minimum of 20 attempts.

For Santos, he atoned for his last-minute failure against the Packers, a 46-yard effort deflected by Karl Brooks on Nov. 17. He finished 2024 having made his last seven field goal attempts and 21-of-24 for the season.


Doubling Up On Success!

Since 1921, the 10 games in which the Packers and their opponent each made a field goal in the final two minutes of the same game.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Comb.

Date

Opp.

GB Kicker

Dist.

Opp.   Kicker

Dist.

Dist.

Jan. 5, 2025

Bears

B. McManus

55

C. Santos

51

106

Nov. 8, 1987

Bears

A. Del Greco

47

K. Butler

52

99

Oct. 23, 2005

Vikings

R. Longwell

39

P. Edinger

56

95

Sept. 20, 2009

Bengals

M. Crosby

45

S. Graham

40

85

Dec. 3, 1989

Bucs

C. Jacke

47

D. Igwebuike

36

83

Oct. 20, 2024

Texans

B. McManus

45

K. Fairbairn

35

80

Oct. 11, 1987

Lions

M. Zendejas

45

M. Prindle

27

72

Oct. 14, 1996

49ers

C. Jacke

31

J. Wilkins

28

59

Dec. 18, 2016

Bears

M. Crosby

32

C. Barth

22

54

Oct. 13, 1985

Vikings

A. Del Greco

22

J. Stenerud

18

40

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

TUESDAY TIDBITS: "There's a Battle Outside and It Is Ragin'"

By TJ Troup 
Fran Tarkenton and Norn Van Brocklin
For the first time since Norm Van Brocklin took the field with his "36 stiffs"... the Vikings play a meaningful game against the Lions this coming Sunday night! 

If Minnesota wins is Kevin O'Connell coach of the year? If Detroit wins is Dan Campbell coach of the year? While there are a handful of other interesting or compelling games this coming weekend; Minnesota vs. Detroit sure stands out! 
Dan Campbell
Was able to watch Eric Dickerson play against the Bears in Angels Stadium during both 1983 and 1984, and boy oh boy did he lug the leather impressively in the Ram victories those afternoons. 

That said, how much should Barkley play on Sunday? His health is paramount, yet that record would be a signature moment for him, and his offensive line—which by the way is coached by who I believe is the position coach of the year in Stoutland. 

For those of you who have read my column over the years you know that the defensive passer rating is my key stat; and that will never change. Four teams have the opportunity to finish first in this team stat, and those teams are Minnesota, Philadelphia, Houston, and Detroit. The combined record of those four teams entering this weekend's games is 50-14. 

Looking back at past historical games has always been a joy for me and sharing my perspective here at the journal is hopefully enjoyable for all of you. 

December 29th, 1974 is the day the Steelers finally realized that they were in fact a team of destiny for their performance in the 24-13 victory over Oakland. 

December 29th, 1968 remains truly the hallmark game in AFL History when the Jets met the Raiders for the right to play the Colts in the Silver Trophy game. 

December 29th, 1963, though, is still my favorite game of all time. The George Allen-coached Bears defense made enough big plays to limit Tittle and the Giants on a frigid day at Wrigley Field and win the title. 

Twelve years old glued to the radio with my dad sitting next to me----with a day! 

Not sure how many of you enjoy the music of the past; and this past week went and saw "A Complete Unknown" at the theater. Robert Allen Zimmerman impacted me in 1964 when his song "The Times They Are a Changin" came across the airwaves—thus the title for today's saga. 
Timothée Chalamet is compelling as Bob Dylan, and just might garner some awards. You might want to check out the flick.....believe you will be entertained.

Michael Hoecht—Blocking Kicks Among Other Things

 By John Turney 
This past Saturday night in a 13-9 win over the Arizona Cardinals in SoFi stadium, Rams linebacker Michael Hoecht blocked his third kick block of the season -- two PATs and a field goal.

The Los Angeles Rams PR department on X that Hoecht, " .. blocked his third kick of the season, the second-most by a Rams player in a single season trailing Cory Littleton (four). His three blocked kicks lead the NFL."

Well, they are part right in that post. His three blocked kicks do, in fact, lead the NFL. Additionally, it is the first time since 2016 that an NFL player had three in a season -- that was Bengals' defensive lineman Margus Hunt. Further, they are the most in the NFL since Alex Carrington of the Buffalo blocked four in 2012.

Where they err is in saying it's, "second-most by a Rams player in a single season trailing Cory Littleton (four)." Littleton has four career blocks (all punts) and had two in both 2017 and 2018. 

The last Rams player to block three kicks in a season (according to official NFL gamebooks) was 1987 when Nolan Cromwell blocked three punts -- though one was in a strike game. Almost a decade earlier Pat Thomas blocked three in a season. It was 1978 when he blocked three field goals and a punt. 

But is that the most in a season by a Ram?

No, the unofficial record is four and it's a four-way tie and they are:
Irv Cross, 4, 1966 (four field goals)
Eddie Meador, 4, 1962 (four field goals)
John LoVetere, 4, 1960 (two punts, one field goal and one extra point)
Bob Reinhard, 4, 1950 (three pints and one field goal)

Meador and Cross were star defensive backs while LoVetere was a defensive tackle -- who was traded along with a draft pick to the New York Giants for a guy named Rosey Grier, the final piece that formed the Fearsome Foursome. 
Irv Cross

Eddie Meador

John LoVetere

Bob Reinhard
Bob Reinhard was a tackle for the Rams who played just one season for the Rams. He'd come over from the Los Angeles Dons of the AAFC where he's been an all-league tackle, one that also punted and played some fullback.

Hoecht has had quite an NFL journey. He was undrafted and signed with the Rams as a defensive lineman and played some there for about a year and a half. Late in his second season, he was moved by the Rams defensive coach to outside linebacker because injuries had depleted that position room.

He started the rest of that season as an edge player and was a starter in 2023 as well. He'd play outside linebacker in the base defense and would rush as a defensive end in their sub packages. In the base defense he'd sometimes move out to the slot or "Apex" as it is sometimes called and cover a tight end or even a receiver if one ended up as the guy he had to match.

This year he does that on a rotational basis. The Rams have second-year Byton Young as one 3-4 OLBer/DE and Defensive Rookie of the Year candidate as the other. When one of them needs a breather, Hoecht will step in.

But that is not all. In the Rams sub defense this year, especially their dime defense he will play inside linebacker. Usually, he will rush, but sometimes he does drop back and cover a hook or curl zone or match a route. In that package, the dime, he's one linebacker and rookie defensive back Jaylen McCollough plays the other second-level player with four rushers in front and five other defensive backs behind them.

The Rams' dime package has been very good this year in creating pressure, getting hits on quarterbacks and, getting sacks and picking off passes as a result of pressure. Hoecht is a major part of that.

Hoecht has gotten to a kick before this year. In Week 3 of the 2022 season, he deflected an Andy Lee punt that was caught by Jake Gervase caught the ball in the air and set the Rams up for a field goal.

However, it does not count as a block. The ball traveled beyond the line of scrimmage so it went down as a three-yard punt and Gervase was credited with a one-yard pun return.

For all intents and purposes, it was a blocked punt but because it got positive yards it wasn't. If someone deflects a field goal and it is no good, they get credit for a blocked kick. 

No so with punts. It probably has to do with how official scoring has to work, but in our mind, there should be a rotating for deflected punts because it's a notable play that can be change-changing. And that is what counting stats is for, identifying big plays and it does not make sense to ignore one because of scoring rules. 

But, then again, it's one of those things that may never change. Such is life.

In the mean time the Rams are concerned with bigger things, but it wouldn't be terrible if Michael Hoecht blocks one more placekick or even a punt to tie for the most-ever by a Rams player in a single season. 

Monday, December 30, 2024

Darn! Old No. 14 Riddles Green Bay

 By Eric Goska

Sam Darnold as pictured in the Vikings media guide.

Sam Darnold stands alone.

Darnold, the castoff who has found new life with the Vikings, shredded Green Bay in Minnesota’s 27-25 win at U.S. Bank Stadium. The third pick overall in the 2018 NFL draft did not miss an offensive snap as his team extracted more yards from the Packers than any other this season.

Let go by the Jets, Panthers and 49ers, Darnold has ascended in the Land of 10,000 Lakes. His passer rating of 106.5 this season is a career-high and ranks fifth best in the league.

Sunday evening, Darnold reminded one and all that he was no Sam Howell or Spencer Rattler, two quarterbacks the Packers schooled in wins over the Seahawks and Saints. The 27-year-old native of California demonstrated time and time again that he’s the real deal.

Darnold completed 33 of 43 passes for 377 yards, three touchdowns and one interception. He was particularly effective in the second quarter (12 of 14 for 156 and a TD) when the Vikings registered 13 unanswered points to go up 13-3 at the break.

Twenty-four of Darnold’s completions landed in the hands of Justin Jefferson (8 for 92), Jordan Addison (6-69), Jalen Nailor (5-81) and T.J. Hockenson (5-68). Nailor, Addison and Cam Akers each caught a touchdown pass.

Darnold completed five or more consecutive passes on four separate occasions. His run of seven straight in the second quarter resulted in five first downs, one touchdown and 101 yards.

So effective was Darnold that only once did the Vikings run more than twice in succession until the fourth quarter. Then, when Minnesota turned to the ground game in the final 15 minutes and Green Bay rallied to get to within two, Darnold went 3-for-3 for 28 before kneeling three times to ensure victory.

Darnold, of course, was not perfect. He overthrew Akers on a short toss behind the line of scrimmage late in the second quarter. He was high on a pass that Carrington Valentine intercepted midway through the third quarter.

But far too often he had the answer for whatever defense he faced.

Jordan Addison caught six passes for 69 yards and a TD.

By this author’s count, the Packers rushed four on 39 of Darnold’s 44 dropbacks. Defensive coordinator Jeff Halfey sent five three times and dispatched six twice.

Karl Brooks registered Green Bay’s lone sack. Aaron Mosby looked to join his teammate, but his fourth-quarter sack and forced fumble were overturned with an expedited review that revealed Darnold’s hand was moving forward when the linebacker collided with the quarterback.

How to best encapsulate Darnold’s performance? Perhaps with a convoluted statistic (see Extra Point) that the media and fans seem to love.

Here goes: Darnold is the only quarterback to have passed for 300 yards, three touchdowns and 20 first downs in a regular-season game against Green Bay while completing better than 75 percent of his throws.

In the last 104 years, there have been 127 instances of a player throwing for 300 or more yards at the expense of the Packers (regular season). In 51 of those cases, that player also found the end zone three or more times. And on 10 of those occasions, said player also amassed 20 passing first downs.

Darnold is the only one to have checked all the boxes: 300 yards, three TD passes, 20 first downs, and a better-than-75-percent-completion rate all in the same game.

Call him a lone wolf. Call him a cut above the rest.

Call him what you will, but Darnold is definitely one who could make life miserable for the Packers should they run into him in the playoffs.

Extra Point: Here’s a convoluted statistic from the Packers Dope Sheet. “(Jayden) Reed is the first player in league history to post 750- plus receiving yards and six-plus receiving TDs and 100-plus rushing yards and a rushing TD in each of his first two NFL seasons.” String together enough qualifiers and just about anyone can make NFL history.

300 Plus 3 Plus 20

The 10 quarterbacks who passed for 300 yards, three touchdowns and 20 first downs in a single regular-season game against the Packers. Sam Darnold is the only one to have done so while completing better than 75 percent of his passes.

Player

Date

Att

C

Yds

TD

HI

FD

Rate

Sam Darnold

12-29-2024

43

33

377

3

1

20

116.1

Ben Roethlisberger

11-26-2017

45

33

351

4

2

21

106.8

Kirk Cousins

9-16-2018

48

35

425

4

1

20

118.8

Drew Brees

9-8-2011

49

32

419

3

0

20

112.5

Drew Brees

9-30-2012

54

35

446

3

0

23

109.0

Ben Roethlisberger

12-20-2009

46

29

503

3

0

20

121.9

Dan Fouts

10-7-1984

50

31

376

3

0

21

105.1

Daunte Culpepper

11-14-2004

44

27

363

4

0

20

117.9

Matthew Stafford

1-1-2012

59

36

520

5

2

27

103.8

Philip Rivers

11-6-2011

46

26

385

4

3

20

85.9