Albuquerque Journal

Surprising Rams, Vikings to meet today in key battle

Saints continue to hum along with Brees’ passing and a suddenly potent running game

- C7

It’s time to find out just how good the Los Angeles Rams are and whether they have staying power as a top NFC contender.

The Rams have become winners far ahead of schedule in Sean McVay’s rookie season as an NFL head coach. He has worked wonders with second-year quarterbac­k Jared Goff and he has the Rams in first place in the NFC West at 7-2. They’re a game ahead of the Seattle Seahawks in the division and they’re tied with the Minnesota Vikings and New Orleans Saints for the NFC’s second-best record, a game behind the Philadelph­ia Eagles.

The games get far bigger from here. The Rams play today at Minnesota. They host the Saints in LA a week after that. They face the Eagles at home and the Seahawks on the road in December. That means playing four of their next five games against the NFC’s other would-be contenders.

By the time that rugged stretch of the schedule ends Dec. 17, everyone should have a very good idea exactly how the Rams stack up in the conference.

No matter the outcome, McVay has done a terrific job. Goff looks like the franchise quarterbac­k the Rams thought they were getting when they made him the top overall selection in last year’s NFL draft.

But if the future is going to be now for the Rams, they need to prove it in the coming weeks.

Around the League

GRUDEN TIME: It’s almost time for the coaching carousel to begin spinning, both in the NFL and in the college ranks. So that means it’s time for Jon Gruden to become a hot coaching commodity.

Gruden, so far, has been mentioned as a possible candidate for the University of Tennessee’s coaching vacancy. He also has come up in speculatio­n about the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ job if they move on from Dirk Koetter.

A person who knows Gruden dismissed the speculatio­n Thursday as merely the latest examples of the rumors that circulate annually about his possible return to coaching. But that doesn’t mean that one of those rumors could not come to

fruition at some point. Gruden clearly loves to be wanted as a coach and he likes to issue neversay-never qualifiers along with any denials. Would the Tennessee job or the Tampa job be sufficient­ly alluring for him to leave the comfort of ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” broadcast booth?

He has coaching history with both, as a former graduate assistant at Tennessee and a former Super Bowl winner with the Buccaneers. The guess here is that Gruden simply enjoys the courtship and can’t bring himself to officially say goodbye to coaching but the TV booth is too stress-free, comparativ­ely speaking, and he never will actually take a job and coach again. But, as Gruden likes to say, you can never say never. KELLY AND FLORIDA: If Chip Kelly makes his return to coaching in the college ranks at Florida, it probably would all but officially end his days in the NFL. Kelly would be remembered as another college coach who could not find matching NFL success in the manner of Lou Holtz, Steve Spurrier and Nick Saban. But in truth, Kelly was not a terrible NFL head coach.

He had a pair of 10-6 seasons with the Eagles. His undoing in Philadelph­ia was not his coaching; it was a power grab to secure control over roster decisions. He was a very poor general manager, and that led to a downward spiral that included a 6-9 season with the Eagles in 2015 before being fired with one game left in the season. He lasted only one year in San Francisco, having been ousted by the 49ers after going 2-14 last season. That cannot be considered entirely his fault, given that Jim Tomsula went 5-11 in 2015 to precede him and Kyle Shanahan is 1-9 this season after succeeding him. BREES ON KAMARA: The Saints are having great success with their tailback tandem of Mark Ingram and rookie Alvin Kamara. The versatilit­y being displayed by Kamara reminds some observers of the manner in which Reggie Bush once was utilized in the Saints’ offense, and quarterbac­k Drew Brees was asked after Sunday’s lopsided victory at Buffalo about that comparison.

“They’re both extremely dynamic players, guys that when they get the ball in their hands, exciting things happen,” Brees said. “I’d say Alvin, his ability to be able to step into this offense — we’ve asked him to do a lot of stuff. We’re very multiple with the things that we do from a personnel perspectiv­e and the personnel groups that come in the game and the tempo at which we operate. He’s in the backfield. He’s out of the backfield and he’s in motion. It can be a lot. He’s a very intelligen­t guy who really works at it. I think you see he has a great vision for what he can be in this offense. And he’s just doing his job.”

QB MOVES: The Vikings made the right choice in sticking with Case Keenum at quarterbac­k, at least for now, over Teddy Bridgewate­r. Keenum is playing well. The Vikings are winning. There’s no reason to make a switch at the moment. Bridgewate­r still can represent the future for the Vikings at the position. But Keenum is the immediate present. …

Coach Sean McDermott’s decision to switch from Tyrod Taylor to rookie Nathan Peterman as the Bills’ starter at quarterbac­k is curious. No, Taylor didn’t play well last Sunday against the Saints. But it wasn’t Taylor who surrendere­d 298 rushing yards. The Bills, at 5-4, still have a chance to secure the franchise’s first playoff berth since the 1999 season. Going to a rookie quarterbac­k — one chosen in the fifth round — under these circumstan­ces was odd. But it does call to mind the pre-draft assessment by Gruden, who pointed to Peterman as perhaps the most NFL-ready quarterbac­k available.

Games to watch

RAMS AT VIKINGS: It’s Keenum vs. Goff. Last season, it would have been a mundane Rams practice. This season, it’s a marquee matchup.

EAGLES AT COWBOYS: Dallas plays its second game without suspended running back Ezekiel Elliott. Just as importantl­y, the Cowboys also are expected to be without left tackle Tyron Smith and linebacker Sean Lee. CHIEFS AT GIANTS: The Giants are awful but they somehow remain interestin­g to watch.

PATRIOTS VS. RAIDERS in Mexico City: Vegas’s team that’s still in Oakland for the time being plays a quasi-home game in Mexico. Got all that?

Games to Miss

BUCCANEERS AT DOLPHINS: The Dolphins appear done and the Bucs are starting Ryan Fitzpatric­k at quarterbac­k. Not exactly a compelling combinatio­n. CARDINALS AT TEXANS:

Another game, another Tom Savage start, another reason to ignore the Texans. BENGALS AT BRONCOS: If only it was 2015, this would be a terrific matchup.

 ?? JOHN CORDES /ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Los Angeles Rams second-year quarterbac­k Jared Goff has led the team to a 7-2 mark.
JOHN CORDES /ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles Rams second-year quarterbac­k Jared Goff has led the team to a 7-2 mark.

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