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 by Elvis
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   38495  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap300000 ... -mentality

Hue Jackson: 4-0 preseason shows different mentality

By Kevin Patra
Around the NFL Writer
Published: Sept. 1, 2017 at 10:04 a.m. Updated: Sept. 1, 2017 at 10:38 a.m.

The Cleveland Browns went undefeated!

Hue Jackson's squad exited the preseason 4-0 after their 25-0 beat down of the Chicago Bears Thursday night. The Browns celebrated -- "hooting and hollering" in the locker room as beat writer Mary Kay Cabot put it -- becoming the first Cleveland squad to pull off the hollow feat since 1986.

"A year ago we were 0-4, so these guys came back with a different mentality,'' said Jackson said. "We understand it's just the preseason, but you've got to start someplace. They accomplished something that hadn't been done in 31 years, which is to be 4-0 and that's a credit to them.''

Save the comparisons to the 2008 Detroit Lions who went 4-0 in the preseason then 0-16 when it counted. This Browns team is leaps and bounds better than that depressing squad.

Jackson is correct that the Browns needed to start someplace. In his first year, they nearly went winless, eking out one win in the regular season. Couple that with the preseason, and Cleveland went 1-19 in 2016.

Being 4-0 in the preseason doesn't tell us much about the Browns chances of taking a step forward in 2017, but their improved defense and a rookie quarterback with physical talents provide a modicum of enthusiasm that Jackson's team won't be completely unwatchable anymore.

The Browns weren't the only team to secure the 4-0 preseason record. The Baltimore Ravens, Denver Broncos, and Seattle Seahawks also didn't lose.

Scoff if you'd like. Winning is still better than losing. That game of Scrabble you play with your husband/wife on Friday nights has less meaning than preseason football games, but you still want to win, no?

 by aeneas1
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   16894  
 Joined:  Sep 13 2015
United States of America   Norcal
Hall of Fame

www.nfl.com wrote:Scoff if you'd like.

thanks, i will... neither the pats (1-3) nor the eagles (2-2) had winning preseason records that year and in the end they represented the afc and nfc in the super bowl... preseason = russian roulette.

 by AvengerRam
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   8686  
 Joined:  Oct 03 2017
Israel   Lake Mary, Florida
Hall of Fame

Preseason Goals:

1. Stay healthy.
2. See No. 1.
3. Repeat as necessary.

 by snackdaddy
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   9661  
 Joined:  May 30 2015
United States of America   Merced California
Hall of Fame

Lol, if you can't win in the regular season, enjoy the preseason. So both the teams in NFL history that went 0-16 were 4-0 in the preseason. Not many coaches put importance on winning those games in the preseason. Unless its a new coach on a bad team. It doesn't hurt to energize the fan base early on. Give them reason to hope at least for a few weeks before the season starts.

 by Elvis
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   38495  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

https://theramswire.usatoday.com/2019/0 ... rans-plan/

Sean McVay, Rams are flipping the script on practice and the preseason

By: Cameron DaSilva | 2 hours ago

Sean McVay is a unique coach in a lot of ways. Not only was he hired by the Rams as the youngest head coach in NFL history (and is still the youngest in the league right now), but his offensive philosophy is also groundbreaking, relying so heavily on 11 personnel with pre-snap motion and deception.

Additionally, McVay is also blazing his own trail when it comes to pre-season preparation. Last year, he caught everyone off guard when he sat all of his starters for the entire preseason. There was skepticism, praise and utter surprise from those watching his plan unfold. Many wondered if it would cause the Rams to come out of the gate sluggish and rusty against the Raiders in Week 1.

Sure, they may not have been all that sharp in the first half, but there were no ill-effects from starters sitting out the preseason. The Rams didn’t score fewer than 33 points in a game until Week 6, finished the regular season 13-3 and made it all the way to the Super Bowl.

After having so much success in 2018, McVay is expected to hold his starters out of the preseason once again. And with it being a copy-cat league, at least a few teams will likely follow the 33-year-old coach’s lead.

Instead of putting his top players in harm’s way during the preseason where so many stars get injured, he’s using joint practices with the Raiders and Chargers as substitutes for the four exhibition games.

“In a lot of ways I think you can expect us to approach the preseason similar with the players that have played a lot of snaps, that we know are proven players in this league. Unless we feel necessary, they’re probably not going to participate in the preseason,” McVay said on the Doug Gottlieb Show. “So that’s why there’s a premium on some of these practices where we’re going to get a chance to compete against the Chargers twice while we’re out here and then the Raiders twice when we go up to Napa. If we feel like we’ve gotten the work necessary, then that can rally almost serve as the preseason work in a little bit more of a controlled setting.”

This may not seem like a revolutionary idea, but McVay is one of the first coaches – if not the absolute first – to reserve the preseason for young players and prioritize joint practices for veterans. All of the Rams’ top players participated in Thursday’s joint practice with the Chargers, including Todd Gurley, Cooper Kupp, Andrew Whitworth and Eric Weddle.

It was a clean practice with no extra-curricular activity, which was the goal. McVay wanted a controlled setting with drills both coaches wanted to run, which isn’t the case in the preseason.

“When we go out to Dallas, that’ll be a great chance in our second preseason game for some of our younger players to play against a division winner, a playoff team and a team we saw last year,” McVay said of the Rams’ preseason game in Hawaii.

McVay’s approach goes beyond the preseason, too. Last season, the Rams had fewer “full-go” practices than just about any other team. Veterans got Wednesdays off and McVay would often replace normal practices with walk-throughs, especially late in the season.

As a result, the Rams were one of the healthiest teams in the NFL, and have been exactly that for a few years now. That’s a testament to their strength and conditioning staff, but also McVay’s out-of-the-box thinking.

There’s no reason to believe McVay will stray from what worked so well last season, either. The Rams have a walk-through on Friday and another on Sunday, giving players small breaks after joint practices with the Chargers.

Walk-throughs still serve a purpose mentally for players, putting an emphasis on the pre-snap aspect of plays and then the first few seconds after the snap.

“I think the biggest thing that I’ve learned, one of the things being a head coach is how the sports science plays into how we really want to train and practice,” McVay said. “It’s not exclusive to veteran players. Eric’s moving around really well and he’s got a lot of explosiveness and juice in those legs. But I think whether it’s Eric, Andrew Whitworth or even some of our players – the Brandin Cooks, Robert Woods, Todd Gurley – we want to make sure they’re as fresh as possible. So there’s a big emphasis on the above-the-neck, the walk-throughs where it’s not as physically tolling, but it is above-the-neck information that they can process – the post-snap things that occur. But so much of what occurs in this game is the pre-snap and then the first few steps as far as our techniques, our fundamentals, our communication that’s entailed. Those are the things we place a premium on. And then when we do go, we go full-speed but in a little bit fewer reps than typically what I had been accustomed to before I had been here.”

That last sentence is important to note. The Rams use shorter and lighter practices often, which is atypical of what McVay experienced as an assistant before coming to L.A. After winning 24 regular-season games and making the playoffs twice, his plan has clearly proven effective.

Clay Matthews has shown an appreciation for McVay’s approach, saying “they do a fantastic job of taking care of some of the vets.”

“To have a day off like this, I didn’t get many days off in Green Bay,” Matthews said this week.

The players appreciate McVay not pushing them to their limits every week in practice, and if it helps them stay healthy for all 16 games, that’s a huge plus. As long as the Rams keep winning and remaining durable, expect McVay’s approach to not only continue in Los Angeles, but spread throughout the NFL to other teams.

 by Neil039
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   2664  
 Joined:  Feb 02 2016
United States of America   LA Coliseum
Superstar

No preseason reps last year didn’t hurt this team making the Super Bowl. Why change it?

 by aeneas1
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   16894  
 Joined:  Sep 13 2015
United States of America   Norcal
Hall of Fame

Elvis wrote:

i think a lot of starters and vets feel this way, including goff....


 by sloramfan
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   1581  
 Joined:  Jun 09 2015
United States of America   cen coast cal
Pro Bowl

that really says it all..

in the controlled scrimmage the rams o-line gets 40 to 50 reps against the chargers starting d-line, where in a pre-season game they might get 10...

keep up the good work mcvay, you obviously know what you're doing...

go rams

slo

 by dieterbrock
4 years 8 months ago
 Total posts:   11512  
 Joined:  Mar 31 2015
United States of America   New Jersey
Hall of Fame

Well I guess the counterpoint is all the 3rd and 4th stringers who wouldn’t get a look in game situations without preseason games.
I think they are a necessity, but it’s shameful that the tickets cost so much and that season ticket holders are forced to pay

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38 posts Apr 24 2024