Texarkana Gazette

In passing league, some teams still find success on ground

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SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Relying on a big-play quarterbac­k to carve up opposing defenses in the passing game remains the best path to offensive success in the modern NFL.

But for teams that don’t have an accomplish­ed passer like Aaron Rodgers, Tom Brady or Patrick Mahomes, sticking to the ground can also work.

“If you want to establish any type of dominance, especially in the trenches, I think it is necessary,” San Francisco 49ers left tackle Trent Williams said. “You got to run the ball. You got to make your opponents respect that.”

The 49ers are one of several teams with lessthan-elite quarterbac­ks that have relied on the run to get into playoff contention, along with Indianapol­is, Philadelph­ia and New England.

Perhaps no team has transforme­d as much as the Eagles, who flipped their script by running just 39% of the time the first seven weeks to a league-high 61% the last nine weeks. That has coincided with a resurgence that has taken Philadelph­ia from 2-5 to 8-7 and playoff contention.

“I think you’re always evolving and changing to make sure you’re doing the best things for your players,” Eagles coach Nick Sirianni said. “I think we definitely changed who we had been and who we are, and to find out what we do best.”

Running behind a powerful offensive line and using quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts in the run game has been that as the Eagles became the first team since the 1985 Bears to run for at least 175 yards in seven straight games.

The Colts, Titans, 49ers and Eagles all rank in the top eight in the league in running on first and second downs in the first 28 minutes of the game, when the game situation doesn’t dictate strategy like it might later and on third downs.

“It keeps the defensive line out of rhythm,” said Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan, whose team has gone back to a heavier reliance on the run in coach Arthur Smith’s first season.

“When they don’t have the chance to just pin their ears back and know it’s going to be drop-back pass, it makes it more difficult for them when they’ve got to defend both. … This league is about slowing down those guys on the other side of the ball and finding ways to do that, and running the football has certainly helped with that.”

The Niners also turned their season around with a three-game stretch when they ran the ball at least 39 times each week. It started when coach Kyle Shanahan challenged his team to run the ball 40 times in a Week 10 game against the Rams that the 49ers won 31-10.

San Francisco finished with 44 rushes thanks in part to the defense generating turnovers, efficient third-down passing from Jimmy Garoppolo, and a tone-setting opening 18-play drive that featured 14 runs.

“I don’t want to say it took their soul away, but it definitely did something,” Garoppolo said.

While that opening drive may have set the tone, maintainin­g that approach all game is only possible when playing with a lead. Passing is still overall more efficient and necessary if teams are forced into catch-up mode.

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