San Diego Union-Tribune

RAMS CAN’T LET WILSON ESCAPE POCKET

- BY GARY KLEIN

The Rams are only a few days removed from helplessly allowing Kyler Murray to dissect them as a passer and runner.

Now, here comes Russell Wilson.

Long before Murray and other next-gen mobile quarterbac­ks took the NFL by storm, Wilson establishe­d the template.

The Seattle Seahawks star, a Super Bowl champion and 10th-year pro, might not scramble as much at age 32, but he remains one of the league’s biggest challenges.

“Russell Wilson is his own breed,” Rams defensive coordinato­r Raheem Morris said.

Controllin­g Wilson will be among the Rams’ main objectives tonight at Lumen Field, where they will attempt to bounce back from a defeat to the Arizona Cardinals.

The Rams are 3-1 and 0-1 in the NFC West. A victory over the Seahawks (2-2, 1-1 in the NFC West) enables the Rams to exhale as they enter a long weekend. Another division loss puts them in danger of falling off the playoff pace.

Sunday at SoFi Stadium, the Rams had no answer for Murray.

The top pick in the 2019 NFL Draft showed his maturity, patiently finding weak spots in the Rams’ pass defense and using his speed and smarts to elude would-be tacklers for key

gains and big plays that sent the Rams to a 37-20 defeat.

“It’s still early in the season, so there are going to be hiccups,” Rams defensive lineman Aaron Donald said this week, “but we can’t afford that.”

Certainly not four days later against Wilson.

The Rams, already wellschool­ed in Wilson’s capabiliti­es, probably will see him running familiar plays.

In January, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll hired former Rams assistant Shane Waldron as offensive coordinato­r. Waldron never served as offensive coordinato­r in his four seasons on coach Sean McVay’s staff, but he digested the scheme as tight ends coach and pass-game coordinato­r.

“I have a lot of respect for what (the Rams) do there and what Sean’s put together,” Carroll said, adding that Waldron has developed chemistry with the staff and players, especially Wilson.

“Philosophi­cally, it was really easy for Russ to join in (with) what Shane has in mind and how we were going to put this thing together,” Carroll said. “Shane did a really nice job of helping the process and transition and choosing what’s the same and what isn’t and all of that.”

Though they are now competing against each other, McVay and Waldron remain close.

“It’s meant so much to my coaching career,” Waldron told Seattle reporters this week. “He’s helped me tremendous­ly.”

But now Waldron is scheming against the Rams — with a seven-time Pro Bowl quarterbac­k. Wilson is off to a typically efficient start. He has passed for nine touchdowns, with no intercepti­ons.

“He plays street ball,” Donald said. “He’s been the same player as far as the things he’s able to do, and get out of trouble, and make things happen with his feet or with his arms.

“So, you know what to expect from that standpoint. But at the same time, obviously him having those years in the league — understand­ing the game a lot more, and able to see certain things, and play better — you can see that as well.”

 ?? STEPH CHAMBERS GETTY IMAGES ?? The Rams defense is well versed on dealing with mobile quarterbac­k Russell Wilson of the Seattle Seahawks.
STEPH CHAMBERS GETTY IMAGES The Rams defense is well versed on dealing with mobile quarterbac­k Russell Wilson of the Seattle Seahawks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States