It is, of course, not surprising that the reviews of Super Bowl LIII were not outstanding. Coming on the heels of one of the most prolific offensive seasons in the sport’s history, America was expecting a shootout between the league’s second (LA) and fourth (NE) highest scoring offenses.
During the 2018 regular season, all teams averaged 373.5 points (the second highest in history), and averaged 5635.6 yards (also second highest in history). The 26.5 touchdown passes thrown per team were an NFL record.
It isn’t surprising that the casual fan, spoiled by the offensive excess of the regular season should take a little offense at the little offense provided a couple of Sundays ago. It is easy to be underwhelmed by the New England Patriot’s 13-3 conquest of the Los Angeles Rams (gamebook) (summary). Too many fans, I fear, have been drawn to the pinball-like quality of play over the recent seasons – to the point where they can no longer appreciate the achievement of both of these under-rated defensive units.
But the resounding message from both teams on this latest Super Bowl Sunday – and, perhaps a message that will resonate through the coming season – is that defense matters.
Defense matters a lot.
Last year we ran through a few of the offensive achievements of the almost-highest-scoring Super Bowl in history. This year’s collection of Super Bowl notes will be much different.
Super Bowl Notebook:
New England’s 13 points were the fewest ever by a Super Bowl winner. The Miami Dolphins completed their perfect 1972 season with a victory in Super Bowl VII (7) by scoring just 14 points in beating Washington.
With the 14-7 final, that game had been the lowest scoring Super Bowl ever until this one.
The Rams tied the record for fewest points scored in a Super Bowl game. That was also set by the Dolphins when they lost Super Bowl VI (6) to Dallas, 24-3.
Back in Super Bowl III (3), Joe Namath famously guaranteed a victory. His prediction was correct, but he, himself, threw 28 passes that afternoon without throwing for a touchdown. He became the first quarterback to win a Super Bowl without throwing a touchdown pass, and his 28 pass attempts stood as the most ever thrown by a winning Super Bowl quarterback without throwing a touchdown pass. That record stood until this last Super Bowl, when none of Tom Brady’s 35 throws resulted in a touchdown.
Jared Goff’s 229 passing yards were the fewest by a losing quarterback in the Super Bowl since Rex Grossman threw for just 165 in losing Super Bowl XLI (41) to Peyton Manning and Indianapolis 29-17. That next year, the almost undefeated Patriots would lose the first Super Bowl of the Brady-Belichick era.
Speaking of Manning, he is still the last losing quarterback of a Super Bowl to average less than 6 yards per attempted pass in the big game. In the shellacking that he and his Denver teammates absorbed at the hands of Seattle in Super Bowl XLVIII (48), Peyton threw 49 passes, but gained just 280 yards (5.71 per attempt). Goff came close to joining him – he averaged just 6.03 yards per attempted pass. His 12.1 yards per completion is also the lowest among losing Super Bowl quarterbacks since that Manning game – Peyton averaged only 8.2 yards per his 34 completions.
Brady’s victory pushed Michigan ahead of Notre Dame as the college with the most alumni-quarterback Super Bowl victories. Michigan now has 6 – all belonging to Brady. The fighting Irish have earned four from Joe Montana and one from Joe Theismann. Notre Dame quarterbacks have lost only two Super Bowls (one each by Theismann and Daryle Lamonica), so their percentage is still better.
University of California quarterbacks continues to struggle on the big stage. With Goff’s loss, they are now 1-4, with Aaron Rodgers accounting for their only victory – but also one of their losses. The other U-Cal losses belong to Craig Morton (2) and Joe Kapp (1).
The Rams’ 62 rushing yards were the fewest by a losing team in a Super Bowl since the Denver Broncos managed just 27 rushing yards against Seattle in Super Bowl XLVIII (48), and the 35 rushing yards that Todd Gurley led the Rams with were the fewest yards rushed for by the leading rusher of a losing team since Denver’s Knowshon Moreno led the Broncos with 17 rushing yards in that Super Bowl against Seattle.
You have to go back 18 years, to Baltimore’s demolition of the New York Giants in Super Bowl XXXV (35) to find a losing team that managed fewer total yards than the Rams’ 260 this year. On that day, the Giants finished with 152. Those Giants were also the last team not to score an offensive touchdown in the Super Bowl until the Rams this year.
The previous record for fewest combined offensive touchdowns in a Super Bowl was two. This had been done in six previous Super Bowls – most recently in Denver’s 24-10 victory over Carolina in Super Bowl 50. This year, the Rams and Patriots combined for just one.
On the plus side, a few individuals came through with noteworthy performances.
This Super Bowl now marks a dozen years since the winning team produced a 100-yard rusher. Indianapolis’ Dominic Rhodes ran for 113 yards against Chicago back in Super Bowl XLI (41). New England’s Sony Michel’s 94 yards this year is the closest anyone on the winning team has come since then (although two losing teams have managed 100-yard rushers in the interim).
Meanwhile Julian Edelman’s 141 receiving yards are the most by a member of a winning team since Super Bowl XXXVIII (38). That was another New England Super Bowl win, with Brady to Deion Branch accounting for 143 yards.
Taking On the Patriots
Defending the explosive and creative LA Rams is a significant challenge for any defense. In some ways, though, the Patriots present a more difficult challenge in that they have been the playoffs’ most persistent and prolific running team.
They bludgeoned the LA Chargers with 155 rushing yards (and 4 rushing touchdowns) on 34 carries in their Divisional Round game. They followed that up by laying 176 more rushing yards (and 4 more rushing touchdowns) on 48 rushes on Kansas City in the AFC Championship game.
Before them now was a Ram defense that had been exceedingly susceptible to the run all season. All regular season, that is. During the regular season, they had ranked twenty-third at stopping the run, allowing 122.3 rushing yards per game, and 5.1 rushing yards per attempt – the league’s worst such figure.
But as the playoffs dawned, this Ram run defense flipped the switch, providing a turnaround as unexpected as any I’ve witnessed. Confronted with top running offenses in their first two playoff games, Los Angeles first muffled the Dallas Cowboys – possessors of the NFL’s top rusher in Ezekiel Elliott. Dallas finished the game with just 50 yards rushing (47 by Elliott). Next up were the New Orleans Saints. The Saints had been the sixth-best running team in football during the season, while leading the league with 26 rushing touchdowns. They had racked up 137 more yards in their first playoff game against Philadelphia.
Again, though, the surprising Ram run defense had all the answers. The Saints managed just 48 yards on the ground against LA.
So one of the sub-themes of this contest would be the matchup of the suddenly unstoppable Patriot ground game against the suddenly immovable Ram run defense.
Starting the game with the ball in their possession – as the Rams deferred – the Patriots began with the ground assault. On the game’s first play from scrimmage, Michel burst for 13 yards. All of New England’s first four plays were runs, the first three of them gaining at least five yards. Three plays into the game, the Patriots already had half as many rushing yards (24) as New Orleans had managed against the Rams in the Championship Game.
The fourth running play managed “just” three yards, setting up Brady’s first pass on second-and-seven from the Ram 34.
New England’s Openings
To this point, this drive was eerily similar to the Patriots’ previous two playoff games. Getting the ball first against both the Chargers and Chiefs, New England had authored two long clock-draining, soul-crushing touchdown drives. They had marched 83 yards in 14 plays against the first LA team. That drive had taken the game’s first 7:11. In their next matchup against KC, they pounded them for 80 yards in 15 plays of a drive that consumed the first 8:05 of that game.
Four plays into the Super Bowl, the combined totals for all three of their first drives read 33 plays, earning 190 yards that had run a collective 18:02 off the clock.
But a funny thing happened as New England sat poised to score their third consecutive opening drive touchdown – an interception.
With Ram cornerback Aqib Talib dropping into deep zone coverage up the offensive right sideline, Receiver Chris Hogan sat down in an open spot in the flat. What should have been an easy first down, though, turned into disaster as Brady’s throw brought Hogan back toward the center of the field, allowing defensive back Nickell Robey-Coleman to get back in the play, where he deflected the ball high enough in the air that linebacker Cory Littleton could slide under it and make the interception.
While that play didn’t necessarily turn the tide of the game, it did turn the tide on the Patriot running game. After allowing those 24 yards on New England’s first three runs, Los Angeles would surrender just 37 more rushing yards on the Patriots next 16 runs (2.3 yards per attempt). Of those rushes, the only one to gain more than five yards was an 8-yard wide receiver sweep run by Edelman.
Under-Appreciated Defenders
In the silencing of the Saint running game, the Ram defense was led by their two highest profile defensive linemen – Aaron Donald and Ndamukong Suh. Bill Belichik and Josh McDaniel’s brilliant response was to not run at Donald. Of New England’s 32 rushing plays on the evening, only six were run in Donald’s direction – and two of those occurred when Aaron was the only defensive lineman on his side of the field. If the Rams were going to stop the New England ground game, it would have to be stopped by someone other than Donald.
For most of the game, that someone (or those someones) tuned out to be Michael Brockers and Dante Fowler. Brockers made 7 of the Rams 31 tackles against the run after gains of just 17 yards (2.4 per). Fowler was primary on 3 tackles against the run for a total of one yard lost.
Even when they weren’t making the tackle themselves, they were disruptive forces in the run game. Mostly lined up against Joe Thuney, Brockers consistently stood his ground, clogging the line and preventing linemen from advancing to the linebackers.
Fowler seemed especially aware of what the Patriots were attempting. He foiled a couple of screen passes (and Brady and the Patriots were only 1 for 4 completing screen passes) and made quick penetration on several running plays.
With 9:55 left in the first quarter, and New England facing a first-and-ten on their own 24, they tried to send Michel up the middle. The blocking scheme on this run called for Trent Brown – the tackle lined up opposite of Fowler – to help Thuney double Donald. With that, the Patriots pulled Shaq Mason from the left side to block on Fowler. But Dante read the play instantly and was into the backfield before Mason could get near him, smothering Michel for a 4-yard loss.
Later on in that drive, now with 6:17 left in the opening quarter, New England sat at third-and-eight on the Ram 31. They tried to sneak a draw to James White underneath the pass rush of Donald. Fowler read that, too, and chased White down after a three-yard gain – a play that forced a failed New England field goal attempt.
This was the pattern through most of the game, as the Patriot offense ground to a near halt as the running game sputtered.
For a little while.
Persistence Pays Off
But the ever patient Patriots kept running the ball. On 68% of their first down plays (23 of 34), the Pats ran the ball. And eventually, the Rams did wear down.
Beginning with a 19-yard sprint from Michel with 1:18 left in the third, the Patriot running attack took over the rest of the game. New England’s final 12 rushes would account for 94 yards (7.8 yards per), 4 first downs, one touchdown, and the two runs that basically decided the game.
The last Patriot drive of the season began on its own 4-yard line. There was still 4:17 left in the game, and the Patriot lead was a slim 10-3. After their first run earned a yard, the Patriots faced second-and-nine from their own 5.
To this point, NE had almost completely avoided running at Donald. Of the six times they did test him, five of those runs gained just 4 yards. At this critical juncture, though, with Donald playing three-technique (over the outside shoulder of right guard Mason), the Patriots lined up with two tight ends to the left of the formation (away from Donald). The Rams overshifted, moving their other two defensive linemen to the left side, leaving Donald and two linebackers alone on the right side.
Just prior to the snap, tight end Dwayne Allen came back in motion to the right side, balancing the lines. At the snap, Marcus Cannon and Mason doubled Donald, with Cannon then going through for Littleton. Allen kicked Fowler to the outside, and Thuney came pulling from left guard to lead through the hole by blasting undersized linebacker Mark Barron. The rest was green grass for Michel, whose 26-yard gallop brought New England from the shadow of its goal line.
Now it is two plays later – with still 2:42 left in the season, but the Rams now down to one time-out. The Patriots face second-and-seven on their own 41. Now, the Patriots would do the same thing, but in reverse. And with the same success.
NE lined up with two tight ends to the right side, and the Rams responded by overshifting their line to that side. The Pats then motioned Rob Gronkowski back to the left side and ran there. Thuney and David Andrews put an initial double-team block on Brockers (lined over center, the farthest left defensive lineman the Rams had), with Thuney then going through to get in the way of Littleton. Brown tossed Fowler to the inside, and Gronk crunched Lamarcus Joyner to the outside. James Develin led through the hole and removed Barron from the equation. Rex Burkhead then sliced back inside and ran to daylight.
New England had done the same thing to Kansas City late in that contest to spring a couple of long runs.
With a second 26-yard run in a matter of four plays, New England authored a game-clinching, nine-play, 67-yard drive (all of them running plays!) that ended in a field goal. It left the Rams with a ten-point deficit, no timeouts, and 1:12 of season left to do something about it.
Although they were essentially stalled for most of the game, in the end, New England finished with 154 rushing yards (and another rushing touchdown) and their sixth title. In winning their three playoff games, NE had scored 11 touchdowns – nine of them on the ground.
The Develin Factor
Once a staple of offensive football, the fullback has become almost a relic. In the new pass-happy NFL, the fullback has mostly given way to a third or fourth wide receiver. But in New England, the fullback is alive and well in the person of James Develin – a specialist whose job it is to ensure green pastures for the running back who will follow him through the hole. Develin was on the field for only 30 plays (42% of the offensive snaps), but his presence was felt. The Rams had 13 runs of more than three yards in this game. Develin led through the hole on 7 of them. He also led through on the two-yard touchdown run.
It is a stretch to say that the success the Patriots have found with Develin will spread to other teams. But the concept certainly works in New England.
Brady and the Passing Attack
With the running game mostly held at bay, the very confident Ram defenders gave Tom Brady and his receivers all they could handle. In one of his least effective Super Bowls, Brady finished with 262 passing yards and a 71.37 passer rating. Tom didn’t have his best game. Some of his throws were off target, and a few of his decisions could well be questioned. But the largest parts of this story are the Ram defenders. Whether in zone or in man, Talib, Joyner, John Johnson, Barron, Robey-Coleman – and yes even Marcus Peters – continuously provided tight coverage and gave Brady few opportunities.
But with such opportunities as presented themselves, Brady managed to get the ball mostly to his two prime-time targets. Super Bowl MVP Julian Edelman finished catching 10 of 12 passes thrown his way for 141 yards and 8 first downs. Tight end Rob Gronkowski caught 6 of 7 for 87 yards and 3 first downs.
Combined, Brady was 16 of 19 (84.21%) throwing to those two for 228 yards (12 yards per attempt and 14.25 per completion). His passer rating to those two targets was a Brady-like 116.67.
But when the Rams managed to take away those targets and force Brady to go elsewhere, the story was much different. Throwing to all other receivers, Brady was 5 of 16 (31.25%) for 34 yards (2.13 per attempt) with one interception – a 14.58 rating.
It’s Julian’s World
The challenge with Edelman is mostly a man coverage issue. One of football’s quickest receivers, Julian is almost always able to get that first step on a defender. And while he doesn’t have the kind of break-away speed that will leave a defender in his wake, he is as tough at catching footballs with defenders hanging on him as you will find in the league.
In this contest, Edelman was kept company by all of the principle Ram defenders. He saw a lot of Talib, but frequently lined up slot-left where he would draw slot-corner Robey-Coleman. He would then frequently run across the field (left-to-right) with Nickell in pursuit. Of Julian’s receptions and yards he caught 5 of 6 for 73 yards and 4 first downs on the right side of the field. Against all man coverage, Edelman caught 7 of 9 for 112 yards and 5 first downs – almost all of these with a defender within arms grasp.
These were difference making catches and yards.
Gronk in the Zone
While zone coverages will tend to minimize Edelman’s impact, they are a double-edged sword as someone will then have to deal with Rob Gronkowski, one of the NFL’s best at finding soft spots in zones. Brady threw to Gronk in zone coverages 4 times, his 4 completions resulting in 40 yards (although just 1 first down). Gronk would have his moment against man coverage, too.
There is 7:43 left in the season, game tied at that point 3-3, Patriots on LA’s 31. Here would be the first of a series of plays that would determine the outcome of the season.
As the Patriots lined up, the Rams made one last attempt to confound the New England passing game. As Edelman went in motion to the right, no one followed him – a zone indicator. Then Littleton crowded the line, threatening a blitz – which would probably be man coverage. Perhaps they were a little too cute, here. Apparently, the only ones they confused were themselves.
On Brady’s last pass of the season, the Rams found themselves in man coverage, but with disadvantageous matchups. They finished with safety Joyner on Edelman and cornerback Talib on running back Burkhead.
The defensive lineup also left Littleton one-on-one with Gronkowski all the way up the left side line.
For the game, Brady would only throw three long passes. All would go up the left sideline. The first two of these came with Marcus Peters isolated on Chris Hogan, with Peters responding to the challenge both times. This time a perfect pass led Gronk over the top of Littleton. Rob’s catch gave the Patriots first and goal on the two, and set in motion the end game.
Third and Less Than Automatic
Against the Chiefs, the Patriot offense thrived on third down, converting 13-of-19. The Ram defense kept its team in the game by holding the Patriots to a much more pedestrian 3 of 12 on this down. Here they played predominantly man coverage, leading to something of a hit-and-miss result. In spite of the fact that New England only converted three of these opportunities, Brady was still 6 for 10 on third down, and the Patriots averaged 7 yards on third down. The three first downs were all catches by Edelman (11, 25, and 27 yards). New England’s other 9 third down plays accounted for a total of 21 yards.
Defending the Rams
With the Patriot offense managing just enough points, this game fell on the shoulders of the New England defense in their matchup against one of the game’s top offenses.
Ram quarterback Jared Goff supervised the NFL’s fifth-ranked passing attack, while he finished eighth in passer rating at 101.1. When you have an offense that has too many weapons to concentrate on, usually the best answer is to stop it at its source. The Patriots answered the new-age Ram offense with an age old defensive prescription. They dialed up the pressure.
While Jared saw about an even mix of coverages (he saw man coverages 49% of the time) it was the effectiveness of the man coverages that made the difference. In his 20 snaps throwing against man, Goff was just 8 of 18 (44.44%) for just 101 yards and his interception – a 39.35 passer rating. He was also sacked twice.
And whether the Pats were playing man or zone, Jared was under frequent blitz pressure. All told, Goff was blitzed on 46.3% of his pass attempts (19 of 41). And even when they weren’t blitzing, the pressure on Goff was nearly constant. After registering only 30 sacks during the regular season, the Patriots racked up 10 in three playoff games. The use of blitzes was a big part. Even more than that, though, over their last three games the Patriots raised the defensive line stunt to almost an art form.
The defensive line stunt has been in existence since the beginning of football. The defensive end comes in and the tackle loops around. It challenges the awareness of the offensive line. By this point of the season – with football’s two best teams left – it should be assumed that both offenses can handle the concept dependably.
But in New England the Patriots have been tinkering with this – combining it with blitzes, stunting with linebackers, employing the experience of their defenders to analyze and adjust. The benefits could not have been predicted.
Kansas City was never able to solve the Patriot stunts. The Rams fell into the same pattern. Goff faced at least some pressure on 30 of his 41 pass attempts (73.2%). According to the scoresheet, he was hit on 12 of those (with linebackers Kyle Van Noy and Dont’a Hightower each accounting for 3). Including the sacks, Jared faced extreme pressure on 16 of his passes (39%). Repeatedly – especially early in the game when the Patriots played more zone – this pressure averted what could have been disasters downfield. On the 12 passes when Goff was being hit while throwing, he completed just 3 for 36 yards and his interception. His rating on those plays was 4.86, and, including the sacks, the Rams gained a total of 5 yards on those 16 plays.
By contrast Brady (who was only blitzed 8.3% of the time) only saw that level of pressure on 8.3% of his attempts (3 of 36).
Stephon Gilmore (who mostly stayed with Brandin Cooks) and Jonathan Jones (who was impressive against Robert Woods) were principle heroes in this contest. Jones has not been a name to conjure with for the most part this season, but over the last two games, Jonathan has met the challenges of Tyreek Hill and Robert Woods. He was most impressive.
The Results
The results of this suffocating pass defense could hardly have been anticipated. Goff never completed more than three consecutive pass attempts, and LA – failing on its first 8 third down attempts – ended up punting on its first 8 possessions. The Rams accounted for a total of 82 yards in those first 8 drives, averaging 2.7 yards per play.
Los Angeles ended the day 3 for 13 on third down. Goff dropped back to pass on 12 of the 13 third-downs. He finished 3 of 10 with 2 sacks, being blitzed on 6 of the 12 plays. All told, Los Angeles’ 13 third-down plays totaled 13 yards. The answer throughout the game was relentless pressure. New England had several defensive lineman that executed the stunts to perfection and applied frequent pressure. Lawrence Guy, Adrian Clayborn and Trey Flowers all played very well.
But the difference really was the linebackers Van Noy and Hightower. With the speed to loop from one side of the formation all the way to the other, and the instincts that guided their timing in and through the line, they were a complication that neither the Chiefs nor the Rams ever managed to solve.
Fourth Quarter Excitement
Los Angeles’ first play of the fourth quarter came with 14:47 left and the score tied at three. To that point, Goff and the passing game had been dominated. Jared was 9 of 21 (42.86%) for just 95 yards (4.52 per pass attempt) and 3 sacks for 29 yards of loss. The vaunted LA passing attack was sitting at 66 total yards for the night.
The fourth quarter – in spite of the fact that the Rams would never score again – would be different. Throwing 17 times in the fourth quarter alone, Jared completed more passes in that quarter (10) and for more yards (134) than in the entire game previous to that point. On the receiving end, Brandin Cooks emerged, catching 5 passes for 88 yards. With the big quarter, Cooks finished the game with impressive totals of 8 catches for 120 yards. But the numbers looked better than they played for both.
Almost all of this damage came during Los Angeles’ last two possessions. With the season winding down Jared completed 6 of his last 11 throws for 102 yards and 5 first downs. Cooks was the target on 5 of those throws – finishing with 3 catches (all for first downs) and 64 of the 102 yards.
But.
While the first of those drives began promisingly enough, there was much more opportunity there than was realized. And the Rams’ last drive of the season – even after I’ve watched it several times – remains a head scratcher.
That Puzzling Last Drive
OK, I grant from the beginning that at this point the Ram chances were very slim. With 1:12 left, they were getting the ball on their own 25, down by 10 and with no time outs. Their bad situation was immediately complicated by a holding penalty by Rob Havenstein (who was certainly not in consideration for Super Bowl MVP).
Back on his own 15 now, with 66 ticks left on the clock, Goff and the Ram offense would throw three consecutive short passes to the middle of the field, completing the first two. By this time, the New England zones were quite soft, as they invited Los Angeles to throw all the short passes they wanted.
Woods caught the first one for 10 yards and was tackled in bounds. Cooks turned a dump off into a 24-yard gain up the middle, but was also tackled in bounds to keep the clock running. When the third straight short pass fell incomplete, it was something of a blessing for the Rams as the clock finally stopped – albeit with just 21 seconds left. During all of these short attempts, the Rams neither sent anyone deep toward the end zone, nor did they send any receivers to the sidelines. Everyone ran short sit-down routes designed to get them open against zones – and they did achieve that. But they were long past the point in the game where getting open underneath the zone coverages would do them any good.
The next throw was deep-ish, Goff tossing a nice pass into a small window into the arms of Cooks for 21 yards (and 45 of Cooks’ yards would come on his two catches on this drive). But again, with no time outs, this throw went over the middle. Down two scores, Goff finally made it up to the line and spiked the ball with all of 8 seconds left in the season.
Again, the situation was difficult and victory unlikely however they went about this last drive. But exactly what they thought they would accomplish with that play selection will remain one of the enduring mysteries of Super Bowl LIII.
Wither the Ram Running Game
To this point, we haven’t discussed the Ram running attack – mostly because there is little to discuss. As pointed out earlier in this piece, it has been a long time since a running attack accounted for fewer yards in the Super Bowl than the Rams’ did. Truthfully, it didn’t seem like the running game was even an important part of the game plan. Kansas City had seemed uninterested in running against the Patriots two weeks before. They ran just 12 times all game. In the Super Bowl, the Rams followed suit. They ran just 18 times all day – in spite of the fact that until that last drive they were never more than 7 points behind. Fifty-five plays the Rams ran this in this game within one score of the Patriots. They threw on 37 of them. They ran 20 plays with the score tied. They threw on 14 of them. Los Angeles ran only 16 plays all evening in New England territory – throwing on 15 of them.
These are not the numbers of a team with a running mindset.
And when they did run, they seemed almost insistent that they were going to run behind right tackle Havenstein. Of their 18 running plays, 8 went over right tackle. One of them developed into Los Angeles’ longest run of the day – through no success of Havenstein’s. At the edge, he was stuffed by Flowers, but Gurley cut the run back the other way for 16 yards. The other 7 runs behind Havenstein gained just 18 yards.
In-Offensive Lines
Heroes in the Divisional Round win against Dallas, when they racked up 273 rushing yards, the Los Angeles offensive line – all of them – came up short in the Super Bowl. They struggled in pass protection all night and failed to generate any sustained semblance of movement for the running game. In a game that was hard fought and tight throughout, the Rams’ fatal flaw was the offensive line that had been their backbone throughout their breakthrough season.
But of all the struggling afternoons, no one’s was longer than right tackle Rob Havenstein’s. Especially the fourth quarter.
Rams’ first drive of the fourth quarter. It is second-and-11 from the LA 22, game tied at 3 with 12:23 left. Deep routes from Woods and Cooks cleared the right flat for Gerald Everett. But Goff had no time to get the ball there as he was sandwiched between Flowers (who had slipped past Austin Blythe) and infrequently used defensive end John Simon, who beat Havenstein around the edge. The throw fell incomplete.
Now facing third-and-11, the Rams profited from a defensive holding call and a 16-yard pass to Cooks – in spite of the fact that this time it was Guy who was beating Havenstein on the pass rush.
A 13-yard run from Gurley was then erased by a holding penalty – not Havenstein this time but center John Sullivan, setting up a first-and-20 from the LA 33.
With the Patriots in zone this time, Woods found an open spot deep in the middle of the coverage that would probably have achieved them the first down. But Goff had no chance on this one, either. This time it was Flowers turn to blow through Havenstein, who barely touched him. Flowers flushed Jared immediately out of the pocket and into the arms of Jonathan Jones for a two-yard loss.
Goff was able to get the next throw off – incomplete on a deep route to Cooks. There was pressure, though, from Hightower working, again, around Havenstein.
Facing third-and-22, LA tried a running play. This time it was Flowers, again, shooting past Havenstein to make the play in the backfield. The Rams punted on the next play.
While this drive – in which he was beaten on five consecutive plays – marked the low spot, Rob’s day was generally underwhelming. A defensive tackle named Deatrich Wise Jr – who didn’t play in the Championship Game against KC, and was only on the field for 31 snaps in this one – still led New England in tackles against the run with 5 (and after gains of only 18 yards). Most of this success came at Havenstein’s expense.
This will not be a film Rob will look forward to reviewing.
The No Fly Zone
Of all the interesting statistical tidbits that emerged from this contest, maybe the most illuminating concerned the fifty-yard-line. In this defensively dominated game, both offenses mostly had their way when they were operating in their own territory.
While on his side of the field, Brady completed 17 of 23 passes (73.91%) for 213 yards (9.26 per attempted pass and 12.53 per completed pass) for a 102.26 rating. The Patriots ran 44 plays on their side of the field, gaining 335 yards with those plays (7.6 per) and earning 15 first downs.
Goff, for his part, was also better in his own end where he completed 14 of 25 (56%) for 181 yards (7.24 per attempt and 12.93 per completion). His rating in his own end was 78.92, and the Rams gained 238 yards on their 44 plays in their own territory (5.4 per) with 11 first downs.
But as soon as each offense crossed the fifty, the defenses took over.
Brady was 4 for 12 (33.33%) for 49 yards (4.08 per attempt) and his interception in Ram territory (12.15 rating). His Patriots managed 72 yards and 3 first downs in their 24 plays in Ram territory (3.0 per).
Goff was 5 of 13 (38.46%) for 48 yards (3.69 per attempt) and his interception (and two sacks) – good for a 17.47 rating. With LA running just once on the New England side of the fifty, the Rams finished with 22 yards and 2 first downs to show for their 16 plays in opposition territory – 1.4 yards per play.
Combined the two star quarterbacks finished 9 for 25 (36%) for 97 yards (3.88 per pass attempt) with 2 interceptions and 3 sacks (a 14.92 rating) on the other side of the fifty. The two teams ran a total of 40 plays in each other’s territory, finishing with just 94 yards (2.4 per play) and 5 first downs.
Of New England’s 154 rushing yards, 122 came on their side of the field. All of Edelman’s passing yards, and 117 of Cooks’ 120 came on their own respective sides of the field. The two teams combined for 27 plays that went for at least ten yards. Only three of them came on the far side of the fifty. The Rams had two of the three – 18 and 17 yard passes to Robert Woods when they were just barely over the fifty.
New England dialed up only one impact play in opposing territory – that last pass to Gronkowski.
That play to the Ram 2-yard line, set up Sony Michel’s touchdown run. The game’s only touchdown thus came on the only red zone play from either team on an evening when neither team would start a drive in the other’s territory, and – thanks to superior punting from Johnny Hekker and Ryan Allen – each team started three drives inside its own ten-yard line.
That is how you get a 13-3 game.
In one of the most impressive post-season performances in memory, the Patriots played the league’s top two scoring offenses in consecutive contests. The Rams and Chiefs combined for 107 offensive snaps. They never took one snap with a lead in either game.
The Plays that Weren’t Made
For all of that, though – for as well and as passionately as the Patriots played on defense – the entire contest could easily have gone in the other direction. As always in tight contests like this, it comes down to a few moments – a handful of plays made and not made. Most of these swirl around former Patriot Brandin Cooks, whose 120 receiving yards will be forever overshadowed by the yards he didn’t get.
There was 3:42 left in the third. New England was clinging to a 3-0 lead, but the Rams were sitting on the Patriot 29-yard line. New England was in cover four – a defense they don’t run very often, and don’t execute with much confidence.
Robert Woods settled into a pocket in the zone over the deep middle, drawing the complete attention of both of the middle zone defenders, Jones and Devin McCourty – so much so that Jones paid no heed at all to Cooks as he sped up the middle into the end zone unattended. Just before he reached the end line, with no one else around him, he turned and looked for the ball. Goff delivered a strike for what might have been a game-changing touchdown. But at the very last second, Jason McCourty – whose assignment had been the deep right sideline – came racing from the far side of the field to deflect the pass, just as it was about to nestle in Brandin’s hands.
That enormous play fended off disaster and kept the Rams at bay until that penultimate – and game deciding – fourth quarter drive. Here, down 10-3, they faced third-and-nine on their own 45 with 5:29 left. The Rams will spend the off-season wishing they could have back any of these next four plays.
Goff converted the first down with an 11-yard toss over the middle to Josh Reynolds. Effective, yes. But this was one of the few plays in which Jared wasn’t under immediate pressure. And there were opportunities upfield. Cooks had beaten Gilmore off the line and had a step on Stephon up the left sideline. Perhaps even more open was Woods, who had split his doubleteam up the middle. Either of those were big plays (and maybe touchdowns) waiting to happen.
Goff completes his next pass as well – this time 17 yards to Woods on the right sideline. But again, the greater opportunity was missed as Reynolds had blown past Jason McCourty up the right sideline. The Rams have moved to first-and-ten on the Patriot 27. But with the rare gift of time in the pocket, the opportunities had been so much better.
Having passed up the deep option the last two plays, Goff wouldn’t let that happen a third time. Cooks ran a go up the right sideline, separating just enough from Gilmore. At the goal line, the football, Cooks and Gilmore all arrived at about the same time. The throw was perfect. Cooks had it briefly in his right hand. But Gilmore had just enough hold of his left hand that he couldn’t bring it up to complete the catch. A second later the ball was rolling harmlessly in the end zone.
Interference? I would say yes. Gilmore clearly held down Cooks’ arm and by the accepted understanding of pass interference that would qualify. Should it have been first and goal? Probably. But before any Ram fans get too worked up, let me hasten to point out that this missed pass interference call was nothing in comparison to the flagrantly missed pass interference that put the Rams in the Super Bowl in the first place.
Karma, I suppose.
Now it’s second-and-ten. For three straight plays, his beleaguered offensive line had bought Jared enough time to read the defense and make a throw. They would not be able to provide him a fourth.
The Patriot blitz overloaded the offensive right side, with Hightower rushing to Havenstein’s outside shoulder, and Wise clubbing Blythe to the inside. Into the gap created by those two rushes, NE sent two defensive backs. Gurley properly took the inside rusher (Devin McCourty), but there was no one to account for Duron Harmon, who came free.
Under serious pressure Goff heaved the pass up the right sideline. With six rushing, New England’s defensive backs played deep, and Gilmore – staying on top of Cooks’ vertical – was waiting for the throw.
This was pretty much the dagger. New England’s running game then keyed the drive to the field goal that gave us the final score.
Rare Symmetry
That interception was part of an uncommon symmetry that began and ended this contest. After this interception, the Rams’ final drive of the season ended with a missed a field goal. The Patriots had begun the game with an interception and a missed field goal on their first two possessions. In a sense, the season itself was somewhat symmetrical as well. Not quite five months earlier, the Falcons and Eagles had begun the season with what was expected to be a shootout. It wasn’t, with Philadelphia escaping with an 18-12 win. That was on a Thursday. The next Sunday Patrick Mahomes would light up the Chargers and begin the magic carpet ride that was the 2018 season.
With this re-assertion by two determined defenses lingering now in our memories for the next seven months, it leaves us with questions to ponder as we await the 2019 season. Does this game signal a turnaround for defenses? Will there be concepts that other defensive coordinators will steal from these two teams that will cause scoring to drop next year? During the season, a few teams turned to run-first philosophies. Most of these of necessity, but at least one of them seemed to do it from choice. Will Neanderthal football continue its resurgence? Or was this just a non-passing fancy? And what will be the result of the blown call that ended the season for New Orleans? Will the NFL react to that? And how?
Every year, now, I find that instead of being the final answer, the Super Bowl leaves more questions to answer for the next year. Enough to stew on over the next seven months.