The Los Angeles Rams are back in the Super Bowl, and they needed overtime to get there. The Rams edged
the top-seeded Saints,
26-23, in the NFC Championship Game on Sunday in New Orleans. Los Angeles will
face the New England Patriots on Sunday, Feb. 3, in Super Bowl LIII. Here's what we learned from
the Rams'
win over the Saints.
1. If last week's divisional round action underwhelmed,
Sunday's NFC title tilt slowly morphed into a memorable thriller capped
by Greg Zuerlein's
money-in-the bank, 57-yard field goal in overtime to airmail the Rams to Super Bowl LIII. Saints fans
were left stunned as Zuerlein's kick -- off a bad snap -- came just minutes
after Saints
quarterback Drew Brees was
hit by Dante Fowler Jr.
on a wobbly lob that wound up in the arms of safety John Johnson.
Trailing the entire way, the resilient Rams now
make Jared Goff the
youngest NFC quarterback in NFL lore to reach the big game.
2. So how did we get to overtime -- and this stunning loss
for the Saints?
After digging themselves out of a 14-0 hole last week
against the Eagles,
New Orleans on Sunday never trailed until the final play. Still, they hardly
operated at the height of their powers. After teaming with Los Angeles for 80
points in their Week 9 tussle, Sunday's showdown felt comparatively formless
for minutes at a time. The Saints built
a 20-10 advantage midway through the third quarter when Brees (with 249 yards
and two scores) hit the ultra-dynamic Taysom Hill for
a 2-yard touchdown on a drive that saw Alvin Kamara
punch through Los Angeles for 34 yards off four grabs.
It felt as if the home-team Saints might
pull away from there, but the Rams defense
refused to die -- helped along the way by a play that will be discussed for
months. With the game tied 20-20 at the two-minute warning, Brees airmailed a
43-yard bomb to Ted Ginn to
the Los Angeles 13. The crowd melted seconds later -- on third-and-10 from that
same spot -- when Rams corner Nickell
Robey-Coleman was somehow not
flagged on a pass breakup that saw him clearly collide with wideout Tommylee
Lewis. Robey-Coleman was fortunate, but he likely could have pulled
down an interception had he turned to see the ball. It's also fair to wonder if
New Orleans would have been in that situation to begin with had Coach Sean
Payton done a better job with clock management.
3. The Rams showed
their own brand of fight, overcoming a mistake-prone, out-of-sync start to go
punch-for-punch with the Saints down
the stretch. A collection of big-money plays led the way:
» Los Angeles finally quelled the
Superdome noise early in the second quarter when coach Sean McVay and special
teams coordinator John "Bones" Fassel dialed up a fake punt that
saw Johnny Hekker peg Sam Shields on
a catch-and-run that kept the march alive.
» That series ended with a field goal, but
Goff spun hope two drives later with a beautiful 36-yard, over-the-shoulder
dart to Brandin Cooks to
set up a 6-yard scoring burst by Todd Gurley to
cut the New Orleans lead to 13-10 before the half.
» Down 20-17 in the fourth, Goff hit tight
end Gerald
Everett for a catch-and-rumble 39 yards before unfurling a
33-yard lob to Josh Reynolds to
set up a field goal that triggered a 20-20 tie with five minutes to play. Later
faced with fourth-and-goal from the New Orleans 1, McVay opted for the kick.
Would he have done so if a different version of Gurley were waiting in the
wings? More on that below.
» Down 23-20 with the game on the line,
Goff was money hitting Reynolds for 19 yards before Woods made a leaping grab
for 16 yards to put the ball at the New Orleans 33. Goff panicked on third down
by unfurling a quick incompletion, but Zuerlein's wavering-but-successful 48-yard
game-tying kick sent the game into a fifth period.
» Come overtime, Goff -- to me -- appeared
more at home in the Superdome, sensing pressure and finding tight end Tyler Higbee on
a handful of game-changing completions.
4. Get ready for two weeks of breathless coverage around
Gurley, who finished with just 10 yards off four totes. His touchdown gallop
failed to mask over an otherwise ugly afternoon. It began when Saints linebacker Demario Davis got
the best of Gurley early, stuffing the runner for a loss on his first carry before
turning a dropped pass by the star back into a killer pick of Goff. Gurley's
ups and downs quickly became a narrative as cameras showed him nestled on the
sideline as McVay used C.J. Anderson (16/44)
on the ground for long chunks of time. Gurley buzz-killed a subsequent series
with another drop on a key third down in the red zone before also appearing to
miss a block on a Goff incompletion. The bright spot here is a Rams offense
that just beat the Saints with
their best player operating as a non-factor. They'll need Gurley at his best,
though, two Sundays from now.
5. The Rams'
defense deserves credit for holding the Saints to
a pair of field goals out of the gate, especially when that Davis interception
set New Orleans up at the Los Angeles 16-yard line. Ndamukong Suh followed
up last week's blue-ribbon effort with a strong outing against the run and 1.5
game-changing sacks. Aaron Donald didn't
light up the box score, but showed flashes of dominance in the second half.
6. Davis and Cam Jordan helped a Saints defense
that gave the offense a chance to win and drew energy from a home crowd that
operated at a fever pitch. McVay called it the most noisome throng in memory,
while the FOX broadcast showed Los Angeles equipment staffers feverishly
working on the communication technology inside Goff's helmet. The Rams also
struggled to call plays in the huddle, but McVay's boys ultimately found a way
out of this madness.
7. With veteran Saints tight
end Ben Watson out of the lineup battling appendicitis, Payton could only watch
as reserve Dan Arnold dropped
a would-be touchdown. A fellow reserve stepped up two drives later, though, as
tight end Garrett
Griffin hauled in the game's first score. That was made
possible when Michael
Brockers was flagged for encroachment on fourth-and-2 from
the Rams'
10.
8. Michael
Thomas set a Saints single-game
record with 211 receiving yards in the team's Week 9 win over the Rams --
and carried New Orleans in last week's win over the Eagles.
On Sunday, facing variations of Aqib Talib and Marcus Peters,
Thomas finished with just 36 yards off four grabs. It was Kamara who paced
the Saints with
96 yards off 11 grabs, but the big plays to Thomas were sorely missed.
9. Prepare for a Biblical flood of McVay written
think-pieces and televised featurettes. They're coming -- in hordes -- and,
well, he's earned them.
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