by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #11 More from the The Athletic:https://theathletic.com/2756086/2021/08 ... ome-noise/• Among the many, many things to watch come preseason games will be Goff’s aggressiveness working downfield. Everyone — Goff, offensive coordinator Anthony Lynn, backup quarterback Tim Boyle, the receivers — keeps insisting that element will be a big part of the offense, but we’ve seen scant evidence of success so far. Even the attempts are virtually nonexistent when Goff gets outside the pocket on a play-action or to escape pressure.Goff’s also missed a few of the shots that have been there. In an 11-on-11 session Friday, Kalif Raymond ran by slot corner Mike Ford, then broke off a late corner route to leave Tracy Walker spinning … and Goff overthrew it by a good three yards.He has found St. Brown getting vertical from the slot a couple of times, and he dropped one in to Chad Hansen during one-on-ones Friday. But Tyrell Williams, Breshad Perriman, even T.J. Hockenson stretching the field? Not yet. The quarterbacks, collectively, did air it out more Friday than they had in days past, but it’s not yet a natural part of the attack. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #12 RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #13 RedAlice liked this post RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by RedAlice 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 6729 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #14 Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #15 RedAlice liked this post RedAlice wrote:Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. That's what happens when i post from my phone, must've been above or below the one i meant (fixed) ... RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by Klayzer 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 5 Joined: Aug 08 2021 LA Coliseum Undrafted Free Agent Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #16 Last edited by Klayzer on Aug 10 2021, edited 1 time in total. Saw Stafford now ranked 6th best QB after the move.https://www.sportsbetting3.com/odds/nfl-oddsNot improved the odds much past Giants and Packers. by Hacksaw 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 24523 Joined: Apr 15 2015 AT THE BEACH Moderator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #17 Elvis wrote:He does do well when not under pressure, , however that pass was tipped by the LB and could have been picked. Lions hype !! GO RAMS !!! GO DODGERS !!! GO LAKERS !!!THE GREATEST SHOW ON TURF,, WAS by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #12 RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #13 RedAlice liked this post RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by RedAlice 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 6729 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #14 Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #15 RedAlice liked this post RedAlice wrote:Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. That's what happens when i post from my phone, must've been above or below the one i meant (fixed) ... RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by Klayzer 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 5 Joined: Aug 08 2021 LA Coliseum Undrafted Free Agent Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #16 Last edited by Klayzer on Aug 10 2021, edited 1 time in total. Saw Stafford now ranked 6th best QB after the move.https://www.sportsbetting3.com/odds/nfl-oddsNot improved the odds much past Giants and Packers. by Hacksaw 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 24523 Joined: Apr 15 2015 AT THE BEACH Moderator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #17 Elvis wrote:He does do well when not under pressure, , however that pass was tipped by the LB and could have been picked. Lions hype !! GO RAMS !!! GO DODGERS !!! GO LAKERS !!!THE GREATEST SHOW ON TURF,, WAS by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #13 RedAlice liked this post RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by RedAlice 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 6729 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #14 Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #15 RedAlice liked this post RedAlice wrote:Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. That's what happens when i post from my phone, must've been above or below the one i meant (fixed) ... RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by Klayzer 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 5 Joined: Aug 08 2021 LA Coliseum Undrafted Free Agent Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #16 Last edited by Klayzer on Aug 10 2021, edited 1 time in total. Saw Stafford now ranked 6th best QB after the move.https://www.sportsbetting3.com/odds/nfl-oddsNot improved the odds much past Giants and Packers. by Hacksaw 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 24523 Joined: Apr 15 2015 AT THE BEACH Moderator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #17 Elvis wrote:He does do well when not under pressure, , however that pass was tipped by the LB and could have been picked. Lions hype !! GO RAMS !!! GO DODGERS !!! GO LAKERS !!!THE GREATEST SHOW ON TURF,, WAS by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by RedAlice 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 6729 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #14 Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #15 RedAlice liked this post RedAlice wrote:Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. That's what happens when i post from my phone, must've been above or below the one i meant (fixed) ... RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by Klayzer 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 5 Joined: Aug 08 2021 LA Coliseum Undrafted Free Agent Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #16 Last edited by Klayzer on Aug 10 2021, edited 1 time in total. Saw Stafford now ranked 6th best QB after the move.https://www.sportsbetting3.com/odds/nfl-oddsNot improved the odds much past Giants and Packers. by Hacksaw 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 24523 Joined: Apr 15 2015 AT THE BEACH Moderator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #17 Elvis wrote:He does do well when not under pressure, , however that pass was tipped by the LB and could have been picked. Lions hype !! GO RAMS !!! GO DODGERS !!! GO LAKERS !!!THE GREATEST SHOW ON TURF,, WAS by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #15 RedAlice liked this post RedAlice wrote:Wrong tweet? That one is just spreading false information about Texas. That's what happens when i post from my phone, must've been above or below the one i meant (fixed) ... RFU Season Ticket Holder 1 by Klayzer 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 5 Joined: Aug 08 2021 LA Coliseum Undrafted Free Agent Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #16 Last edited by Klayzer on Aug 10 2021, edited 1 time in total. Saw Stafford now ranked 6th best QB after the move.https://www.sportsbetting3.com/odds/nfl-oddsNot improved the odds much past Giants and Packers. by Hacksaw 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 24523 Joined: Apr 15 2015 AT THE BEACH Moderator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #17 Elvis wrote:He does do well when not under pressure, , however that pass was tipped by the LB and could have been picked. Lions hype !! GO RAMS !!! GO DODGERS !!! GO LAKERS !!!THE GREATEST SHOW ON TURF,, WAS by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025
by Klayzer 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 5 Joined: Aug 08 2021 LA Coliseum Undrafted Free Agent Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #16 Last edited by Klayzer on Aug 10 2021, edited 1 time in total. Saw Stafford now ranked 6th best QB after the move.https://www.sportsbetting3.com/odds/nfl-oddsNot improved the odds much past Giants and Packers. by Hacksaw 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 24523 Joined: Apr 15 2015 AT THE BEACH Moderator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #17 Elvis wrote:He does do well when not under pressure, , however that pass was tipped by the LB and could have been picked. Lions hype !! GO RAMS !!! GO DODGERS !!! GO LAKERS !!!THE GREATEST SHOW ON TURF,, WAS by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025
by Hacksaw 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 24523 Joined: Apr 15 2015 AT THE BEACH Moderator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #17 Elvis wrote:He does do well when not under pressure, , however that pass was tipped by the LB and could have been picked. Lions hype !! GO RAMS !!! GO DODGERS !!! GO LAKERS !!!THE GREATEST SHOW ON TURF,, WAS by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025
by aeneas1 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 16894 Joined: Sep 13 2015 Norcal Hall of Fame Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #18 Hacksaw wrote:Lions hype !!well not a lot of post-scrimmage hype coming from the rams, probably for good reason, they've posted a 29 sec "highlight" vid from the scrimmage with, oddly, almost no highlights.i watched the cowboys feed of the scrimmage, there were some bright spots, but it seemed like "a work in progress" made up most of the footage, for example this from stafford / offense. by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025
by Elvis 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 40989 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #19 https://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/sto ... roit-lionsJared Goff and Anthony Lynn, discarded by L.A., find common cause in DetroitBY SAM FARMERSTAFF WRITER AUG. 12, 2021ALLEN PARK, Mich. — They arrived in Los Angeles in the hopes of building something special.They left in dejection and disappointment.Now, Jared Goff and Anthony Lynn are ready for a reboot, primed to redefine themselves with the Detroit Lions, a franchise that hasn’t won a playoff game in 30 years.Goff is the quarterback the Rams swapped for Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Lynn was the first head coach of the relocated Los Angeles Chargers but was fired in January, less than a year after signing a contract extension. He’s now the Lions’ offensive coordinator, his future tied to a quarterback with whom he once shared space in SoFi Stadium.“I’ve never been fired before in my life, so it took me a little while to get over that,” Lynn told the Los Angeles Times last week after a training camp practice.“I was going to take a gap year. Ever since I was 6 years old, I haven’t done anything but football. Then this opportunity came up. I had made my mind up that I was staying out this year. But I said, ‘Hey, I can do this.’”There’s no tragedy here. It’s the way of the NFL. People — successful people — are fired and hired, traded and cut every week. But for Goff and Lynn, there’s a little extra sting to their departures. They were once central figures in their respective locker rooms, but neither played in front of fans at SoFi Stadium. The first time they will experience crowds in that multibillion-dollar venue, they will be on the visitors’ side, when the Lions play at the Rams on Oct. 24.Both experienced their L.A. apex during the 2018 season. Lynn guided the Chargers to a 12-4 record and a wild-card playoff victory on the road against Lamar Jackson’s Baltimore Ravens. Goff reached the Super Bowl. Both teams saw their season end with a loss to the New England Patriots. The future was bright.Two years later, Goff and Lynn were packing their bags.“Life happens. That’s the way it goes. It wasn’t meant to be.”JARED GOFFThe Rams mortgaged their future to get Goff in 2016, sending six picks, including two firsts, to move up to the top spot in the draft from No. 15. No franchise had ever traded up that far to get the No. 1 pick. After a slow start in the withering Jeff Fisher regime, Goff quickly hit his stride under new coach Sean McVay.Goff had his share of L.A. highlights. There was the Thursday night victory over Minnesota — 465 yards passing, with five touchdowns to four different receivers — and the epic 54-51 thriller over Kansas City on Monday Night Football. There was the pivotal first-down run in a playoff victory over Dallas.“The way it ended was sour,” he said, “but there’s so many good things we did there, so much fun, so many good memories I’ll remember forever.”The particulars of that sour ending aren’t entirely known. What’s clear is that McVay did not have faith that Goff was the quarterback to best execute his plan. The coach wanted an upgrade, and seemingly got one in Matthew Stafford, an elite passer who, although he never won a playoff game, routinely generated a lot of offense in Detroit despite the consistent absence of a running game.The Rams’ practices look different now, with Stafford wowing spectators with his surgically precise passes, putting the football where only the receiver can get it. Longtime Lions observers say Detroit practices look different, too, now with a quarterback and his more mortal arm.But bring on the low expectations, say Goff and Lynn.“It’s the challenge that’s so fun for me,” Goff said. “The outside expectation is low. That’s fine. We don’t pay attention to it. But the challenge that I have and we all have is to build this thing from the ground up.”As for Lynn, he has more regrets. The Chargers finished 7-9 in his final season, with seven of those losses by one score or less. Saddled with the reputation of a coach who couldn’t manage the clock, he said he wished now that, rather than lashing out at his critics, he would have spent more time explaining his decisions to use or not use timeouts.He said he wished he hadn’t taken over special teams in the middle of last season. Given the chance to do it over, he would have delegated more. “I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing,” he said.Of course, all that is history.“I know I’d be a better head coach now than I was four years ago,” he said. “But right now my main focus is just being an offensive coordinator and helping us win football games here.”Brad Holmes, the new general manager of the Lions, came from the Rams, where he was the director of college scouting. He was always a proponent of Goff, and was pleased to get him in the exchange, painful as it was to give up a top-shelf talent like Stafford, who had asked to be traded.“I called [Goff] after the trade, and he needed some time to get his bearings together,” said Holmes. “After about two minutes, he says, ‘Alright, I’m ready to roll. Let’s make this thing go.’ Two minutes of, ‘Wow. OK. Wow.’ But then he was ready.“I wound up being a jack-of-all-trades and a master of nothing.”ANTHONY LYNN“He’s got a different swagger about him now. You can see the breath of fresh air he’s walking around with. He’s always been a confident kid to me, but I just see that he’s a little different now.”At 26, Goff is no longer a wide-eyed kid but a seasoned veteran ready to take a leadership role.“I’ve obviously matured,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I’ve seen the game from a new perspective and appreciate it more than I ever have. … This gives me the ability to be that veteran guy and be that leader for a lot of these young guys and transition into that part of my career.”And he has that opportunity in a market starkly different from the one he left.“In L.A., everything was so new there, and the fan base grew over time,” he said. “It took a couple years, and I’m sure it’s still growing.“But here there’s roots, man. There’s roots and you can feel it. Throughout the city, you see it everywhere. You see Lions fans, you see stickers on cars, license plates. It’s passion, and they care.”Holmes and first-year coach Dan Campbell met with Goff soon after he arrived in Detroit and unfurled their expectations.“We’re not putting any pressure on him — be who you are,” Holmes said. “But we’re going to give him full ownership. ‘This is your offense. If things aren’t running right, if there’s a script in practice that didn’t get off to the right start, you start it over.’ That’s the ownership he has.“I remember when Dan told him that in his office.”It was a meaningful gift and obligation, one befitting the Motor City.Goff has the keys to the car. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 23 posts Apr 19 2025
by Joe Pendleton 3 years 8 months ago Total posts: 2019 Joined: Jun 12 2021 LA Coliseum Pro Bowl Lions Writer: Vast Difference Between Stafford And Goff POST #20 .. wish the Kid all the success in the world (but), I cannot wait to go to the Lions game (and watch MS go off on his new team "Haven't you learned the rules of probability and outcome Joe? Aren't you aware that every question of life and death remains a probability until the outcome?" - Mr. Jordan (Heaven can wait) Reply 2 / 3 1 2 3 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business