Dare wrote:that lack of mobility requires tremendous OL play consistently to be successful.
T3rry wrote:The D-Line can just sit back and play patty cake with the OL, wait for Stafford to get into his throwing motion and get their hands up to deflect the ball because they know he's not a flight risk.
Joe Pendleton wrote:he just can't escape the pocket like he used to (which was always at a minimum)..
IMO? This is all just a heavy dose of recency bias. It's aftershocks from the MIami game.
With the Rams, when Stafford is in his groove, he has never had "tremendous" OL play. He has had
good OL play.
The Miami game was actually the bane of every single qb in the league, mobile or not--
subpar OL play. That was because for whatever reason the Rams took a stable OL (as seen after the bye) and replaced 3 positions with guys who were just coming back from long injuries. That OL was out of sync and lacking good communication, and one of the 3 new guys was iffy as a player in the first place (Noteboom, in case that has to be spelled out). There was no rush to replace 2 guys who were playing well at the same time Hav was out. If it were me, I would have at least kept Limmer in for one more game. It just wasn't a coherent unit.
Like the idea that DL can just bat down Rams passes at will. That's actually a very rare occurence in Rams games, even the (many) games where they played with injury reduced OLs, but it happened a couple of times Monday night so all of a sudden it's this "thing" that routinely plagues Stafford?
Stafford doesn't require "tremendous" OL play, he requires solid and stable OL play, and instead this season, a few times he got badly subpar OL play (like a couple of times before the bye because of injuries, and then Monday). When that happens he can struggle as much as any qb in the league struggles with poor OL play.
Ah but here's the thing. The magic qb who can play well behind that kind of subpar OL? That has rarely if ever happened, and I mean in the entire history of the NFL. If you doubt me, name all the qbs who have played consistently well behind extensively broken, multiple injury replacement OLs. Or just plain subpar OLs playing as poorly as the Rams OL did Monday (because for some reason they replaced 3 spots overnight with guys who were all coming back from long injuries, and it predictably didn't work).