Los Angeles Times

Coach confident Goff is ready

- gary.klein@latimes.com Twitter: @latimeskle­in Times staff writer Sam Farmer contribute­d to this report.

modest $7 million this season, allowing them to invest heavily in other stars to build a Super Bowl contender before their quarterbac­k is due a lucrative contract extension.

The team, it has been argued, is simply protecting a prime asset — and the building blocks around him.

So, while the league’s 31 other starting quarterbac­ks played — Tom Brady, a fivetime Super Bowl champion, threw 44 passes in two games for the New England Patriots; Aaron Rodgers, who recently signed the richest contract in NFL history, threw four passes in one game for the Green Bay Packers — Goff and the rest of the Rams starters sat through the exhibition games.

“In an ideal world, you would like to be able to have him get that experience and things like that,” McVay said. “But, at the risk for what we thought could potentiall­y occur, that was a decision that we made and I totally respect and understand that people might disagree with that.” Some people do. Rich Gannon, the league’s most valuable player in 2002 when he led the Raiders to the Super Bowl, said he could not recall a situation when a starting quarterbac­k did not play in the preseason for any reason other than an injury.

A veteran of 17 NFL seasons, he said quarterbac­ks need to hone their timing, get a feel for the pass rush and absorb contact if they are expected to be fully prepared.

Gannon said there was nothing that can be done in practice to simulate the speed, the tempo and the pressure of playing quarterbac­k in the NFL on game day.

“I’m not going to suggest [Goff ’s] not going to go out and play well and that he’s not ready to play,” he said. “I’m just saying, from a quarterbac­k’s perspectiv­e, a guy who played 17 years, it would make me very, very uncomforta­ble.”

Former NFL coach Bruce Arians was also skeptical, about Goff’s situation in particular.

“I’m not really sold about him not playing in the preseason,” he said. “It’s not like he’s been to eight Pro Bowls.”

Former Rams quarterbac­k Vince Ferragamo, who led a Super Bowl run during the 1979 season, said practice reps were valuable but did not simulate the speed, awareness and conditioni­ng required in games.

“For me, to have a sharp knife, I have to really sharpen it,” he said. “Sometimes what you do in practice and then play in a game is a whole different aspect.

“It’s almost like you running in the Kentucky Derby and you haven’t had any prerequisi­te races to be able to come out of the chute,” Ferragamo said. “Sometimes, with a long layoff, it takes a race or two for the horse to get ready.”

Last season, Goff passed for 28 touchdowns, with only seven intercepti­ons, and led the Rams to their first playoff appearance since 2004. He looked sharp during training camp practices and has said that he was not worried about not taking snaps in the preseason games.

“It will be fine,” he said after the third preseason game when it became clear he would not play at all. “I don’t think we’re too concerned about it. Coach’s decision.”

Actually, part decision, part circumstan­ces. If not for a quirk in the schedule and a minor injury, Goff probably would have taken at least a few snaps.

In Week 2 of the preseason, the NFL pitted the Rams against the Raiders, and neither team wanted to play people or reveal strategy that might be exploited in Monday’s opener, just a few weeks later.

The next game, neither front-line tackle was available — one was resting, the other had tweaked an ankle — so McVay determined the potential risk of injury to Goff was too great. In the final tuneup, the Rams followed standard league protocol by resting all the starters.

Sitting all the starters all the time is thought to be unpreceden­ted, but unorthodox thinking is nothing new for McVay.

Last season, with the NFC West title clinched and a playoff game looming, he did not play starters in the final regular-season game against the San Francisco 49ers.

The next week, in the playoff game against the Atlanta Falcons, Goff appeared nervous at the outset, and the Rams’ highscorin­g offense mostly stalled in a 26-13 defeat.

“Am I always going to be right?” McVay said of his decision not to play Goff in the preseason. “No. And that’s where you can’t be afraid to say when you look back at some of the decisions, if it didn’t work out, why wasn’t that the case?”

Rick Neuheisel, a former NFL quarterbac­k coach and college head coach who is an analyst for CBS Sports, credits McVay for being an innovator who wouldn’t strategize “the cookie-cutter way because that’s what his forefather­s did.”

Kevin Demoff, the Rams’ executive vice president for football operations, cited the Rams’ history in backing McVay’s decision.

In 1999, starting quarterbac­k Trent Green suffered a season-ending knee injury during the preseason. Backup Kurt Warner stepped in and led the Rams to the Super Bowl en route to a Hall of Fame career. But in 2014, Sam Bradford — the No. 1 pick in the 2010 draft — suffered a season-ending knee injury during the preseason. The Rams finished 6-10.

“You lose Bradford in the third preseason game and it ruins your season,” Demoff said. “There is nothing you can do in Week 4 that’s going to be able to replace your starter — unless you have the Kurt Warner story waiting on the bench.

“It’s impossible to replace your starter, so for those of us who lived through a quarterbac­k lost for the year in Week 3 of the preseason, you’re always going to appreciate a conservati­ve approach,” he said.

It remains to be seen what effect, if any, Goff’s absence from preseason games will have on his performanc­e Monday night and beyond.

“Well, I hope it has a terrible impact on him, honestly,” Raiders coach Jon Gruden said with a laugh. “I can’t say that I remember watching a team in a first game where none of the [offensive] players played … so it’ll be interestin­g, for sure, what tricks they have up their sleeves and how ready everybody is.”

McVay appeared confident that Goff and the rest of his team are adequately prepared. And if it doesn’t look that way Monday night, he knows the drill.

“The results are going to predicate kind of what that final thing is,” the coach said, “and I’m OK with those consequenc­es, knowing that you’ve got to take ownership of your decisions.”

Besides, the Rams can always depend on a defense anchored by Aaron Donald, the NFL’s reigning defensive player of the year, and All-Pro acquisitio­ns Ndamukong Suh, Marcus Peters and Aqib Talib.

That unit did get some experience in the preseason.

Seven plays.

‘Am I always going to be right? No. And that’s where you can’t be afraid to say ... if it didn’t work out, why wasn’t that the case?’ — Sean McVay, Rams coach, on his decision not to play Jared Goff in preseason

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? QUARTERBAC­K Jared Goff signs autographs at training camp in Irvine last month. The Rams will open the regular season on Monday.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times QUARTERBAC­K Jared Goff signs autographs at training camp in Irvine last month. The Rams will open the regular season on Monday.

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