Lethbridge Herald

McVay had no answers

COACH LOOKS TO FUTURE AFTER R AMS’ RIDE DERAILS IN SUPER BOWL

- Greg Beacham THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — ATLANTA

Sean McVay has had very few bad days during his two seasons in charge of the Los Angeles Rams. His coaching tenure had been a rocket ride all the way to the Super Bowl.

Until Bill Belichick sent this bright football mind and his exciting team plummeting back to Earth.

What McVay does about it will determine whether the Rams are still an ascending powerhouse or another NFL contender broken by the New England Patriots.

After Belichick’s defence turned McVay’s offence into the worst version anyone had ever seen, the Rams’ 33-yearold offensive guru was visibly frustrated and embarrasse­d. His clenched jaw in postgame interviews also signified a determinat­ion to never let it happen again.

“The thing that is so tough about all of this is the finality to it,” McVay said Sunday night after his Rams failed to score a touchdown for only the second time in his 36 games in charge. “Usually, if you go through some adversity, you get a chance to bounce back right away. This one is going to stick with you. It just stings in your gut. I’m still kind of numb right now, but I have so much love for these players and these coaches. That’s where it really eats at you, because you feel like you didn’t do your part to help them achieve success.

“This is going to be a very humbling, tough one that you learn from. But you have to demonstrat­e that mental toughness you talk about, and that is all I know how to do.”

McVay could have been speaking partly to convince himself after he coached only the second team in 53 Super Bowls to fail to score a touchdown. The wunderkind’s confidence appeared to be shaken to its core by a New England defence that held the 11th highest-scoring team in NFL history to 260 total yards, six first downs in the first three quarters and their fewest points in McVay’s era.

“It’s embarrassi­ng,” left tackle Andrew Whitworth said. “It stings to play that way. You’d almost rather score a ton and lose that way, but that would take away from what the defence did. They gave us every opportunit­y to win.”

McVay thrives on X’s and O’s, and he will have six months to scheme new ways to attack the similar zone defences used late in the year by Detroit, Chicago and New England to throttle the Rams’ passing game. He also will endeavour to teach Jared Goff to make better decisions under pressure after the young quarterbac­k’s stinker of a Super Bowl .

General manager Les Snead has big calls to make on soonto-be free agents and roster vacancies. The Rams will return with a wealth of talent, but they must determine whether their 4-3 record in their final seven games was a sign of bigger flaws.

Financiall­y speaking, the Rams’ championsh­ip window remains wide open for at least one more season before Goff likely gets a significan­t raise and consumes a larger chunk of their cap space in 2020. They can deal with their disappoint­ment by adding players, not culling them — and after the bold moves of the last off-season, there is no reason to suspect the Rams won’t go all in again in 2019.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay speaks to Jared Goff (16) on the sideline during the second half of the NFL Super Bowl 53 football game against the New England Patriots, Sunday in Atlanta.
Associated Press photo Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay speaks to Jared Goff (16) on the sideline during the second half of the NFL Super Bowl 53 football game against the New England Patriots, Sunday in Atlanta.

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