DEFENSIVE MVP -- RAMS DEFENSIVE TACKLE AARON DONALD: He
held out of training camp for two consecutive seasons, refusing to settle for
less than his worth. With 10 days until the opener, Donald signed a six-year,
$135 million extension -- including $87 million guaranteed -- to become the
highest paid defensive player in NFL history (Khalil Mack signed
a deal worth more the following day).
Then Donald overcame a sluggish start to go on a tear. He
was held without a sack through the first three games, but finished the season
with record-breaking numbers.
Despite dealing with double-teams on an overwhelming
majority of snaps, Donald recorded 20.5 sacks to set a new NFL single-season
record for a defensive tackle, since sacks became an official individual stat
in 1982. His 20.5 sacks also set a new Rams franchise record.
Against the 49ers in Week 7, Donald set a new career best
with four sacks.
Donald earned his fifth Pro Bowl honor in five seasons and,
while considered an outsider in the MVP race, is the favorite to repeat as the
NFL's Defensive Player of the Year.
OFFENSIVE MVP -- RAMS RUNNING BACK TODD GURLEY: Before
the start of his fourth season, Gurley signed a four-year contract extension
worth $60 million, with $45 million guaranteed, to become the highest-paid
running back in NFL history.
He certainly proved his worth in the Rams' high-scoring
offense.
Despite sitting out the final two regular-season games
because of a sore knee, Gurley scored a league-best 21 touchdowns, ranked third
with 1,251 rushing yards and caught 59 passes for 580 yards. Among players who
started more than three games, Gurley ranked second in rushing yards per game,
averaging 89.4.
Through 11 weeks, and a 10-1 start, Gurley was considered a
serious contender in the MVP race. He rushed for a career-high 208 yards in a
victory over the Denver
Broncos. And he also set a new franchise record after he scored a
touchdown in 13 consecutive games dating to the 2017 season.
Gurley was named to his third Pro Bowl.
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR -- 49ERS OFFENSIVE TACKLE MIKE
MCGLINCHEY: When the Niners used the No. 9 overall
pick on McGlinchey in the 2018 draft; they also traded away incumbent right tackle Trent Brown.
Brown had established himself as a top-tier pass protector but didn't give San
Francisco what it sought in the run game. So, the Niners jettisoned Brown and
pulled the trigger on McGlinchey even with some highly rated defenders still on
the board.
The immediate returns on McGlinchey have been positive,
particularly in the area most expected, the run game. For what it's worth, Pro
Football Focus rates McGlinchey as one of the best run-blocking tackles in the
league, and the statistics are there to support it. While there have been some
hiccups in pass protection, McGlinchey hasn't backed down despite facing the
likes of Aaron Donald, Khalil Mack, Von Miller, Melvin Ingram and
other elite edge rushers.
McGlinchey's strong rookie season will fly under the radar,
mostly because of the position he plays. But he did enough to solidify himself
as a franchise building block with an eye toward becoming the eventual
replacement on the left side when Joe Staley retires.
COACH OF THE YEAR -- SEAHAWKS' PETE CARROLL: Of
all the coaching challenges Carroll has faced since he came to the Seahawks in
2010, this year's might have been the toughest.
It's not as though the Seahawks are devoid of stars -- not
by a long-shot -- but in the 12 months between Cliff Avril's career-ending neck
injury last year and Earl Thomas' broken leg in September, Seattle lost seven
Pro Bowlers (Avril, Thomas, Kam
Chancellor, Richard
Sherman, Michael
Bennett, Sheldon Richardson and Jimmy Graham)
and has played most of this season without an eighth (K.J. Wright).
Carroll has gotten 10 wins and another playoff berth out of
a roster no longer loaded with blue-chip talent. It's why he's the choice for
Coach of the Year in the NFC West -- and why he's a candidate for the
league-wide award.
Carroll's case also includes the decisions he made while
overhauling his coaching staff, even if it wasn't completely his choice to fire
coordinators Darrell Bevell and Kris Richard, plus offensive line coach Tom
Cable, among several other assistants. With Brian Schottenheimer calling plays
and Mike Solari in charge of the O-line, Russell
Wilson is having arguably his best season, and Seattle leads
the league in rushing. The defense has been statistically average under Ken
Norton Jr., but average is pretty good given that most of the lost firepower
came on that side of the ball.
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