The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Rams succeeding with clever offense and major toughness

Peters, Talib bring physical play to LA

- By Greg Beacham

THOUSAND OAKS >> Marcus Peters was in Amari Cooper’s face from the Cowboys’ opening drive until the postgame handshakes, where the Los Angeles Rams cornerback gave one last shove to the Dallas receiver.

Peters didn’t win all of his matchups with Cooper. In fact, his unnecessar­y roughness penalty from his first scrap with Cooper led directly to Dallas’ first touchdown in the clubs’ divisional playoff game Saturday night.

But for better or worse, Peters also exemplifie­d his team’s determinat­ion not to be pushed around by anyone — and sometimes, they’ll even start the fights.

With their 30-22 victory over the Cowboys, the Rams (14-3) are headed to the NFC championsh­ip game with an incendiary attitude and renewed proof of their toughness on both sides of the ball.

“Our sense of focus and the sense of urgency have gone up tremendous­ly,” guard Rodger Saffold said Sunday while the Rams waited to find out who they would play.

The Rams have built a reputation for cerebral, clever play during two seasons of coach Sean McVay’s influentia­l offensive schemes. But one big difference between last season’s team, which lost its first playoff game, and this season’s NFC championsh­ipbound squad is the Rams’ provocativ­e new defensive players, including Peters and fellow cornerback Aqib Talib, along with a teamwide embrace of physical, disruptive play.

These Rams have an attitude, and it’s taking them far: At about the same time Peters and Cooper were shoving each other instead of shaking hands, Talib interrupte­d Jared Goff’s postgame interview with a joyous expletive on live television.

Extracurri­cular exploits aside, the Rams are in their first NFC title game in 17 years because of the way they manhandled the Cowboys on both sides of the line. Dallas entered the Coliseum with one of the NFL’s top rushing defenses along with their own powerful rushing offense led by NFL rushing champion Ezekiel Elliott, but the Rams dominated on the ground.

Los Angeles’ rushing offense was historical­ly good, with C.J. Anderson and Todd Gurley both topping 100 yards rushing on the way to a franchise-record 273. Both backs gave the credit to their offensive line, which led the Rams to average a whopping 5.7 yards per carry.

The Rams’ defense spent most of the first half on the sideline watching as their offensive line carved chunks out of the Dallas defense. Los Angeles edge rusher Dante Fowler could only smile when left tackle Andrew Whitworth led the blocking for Gurley’s 35yard touchdown run.

“They played very physical, lights out,” Fowler said. “The intensity that Whitworth brought, that set the tone. Especially with that touchdown that Gurley had, I think that was the real tone-setter. That was the difference in the game. If you really look at the play, the block that Whitworth made for the touchdown, that set the tone. That’s when I knew we were going to win the game.”

When the Rams’ defense finally got on the field, they showed toughness of their own. Elliott managed just 47 yards on 20 carries, admitting afterward that the Rams “dominated us up front.”

The Rams’ offensive line has been respected as one of the NFL’s best for the past two years while Gurley reigned as one of the NFL’s best running backs, yet the five linemen relished the chance to show what they could do in the ground game.

“The coaches saying they would just put it on our back and let us do our thing, that gave us a huge confidence boost and that shared sense of responsibi­lity to just go out there and work a little bit harder on this one,” Saffold said.

More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https:// twitter.com/AP—NFL

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Los Angeles Rams defensive end Michael Brockers celebrates during the second half in an NFL divisional football playoff game against the Dallas Cowboys Saturday in Los Angeles.
MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles Rams defensive end Michael Brockers celebrates during the second half in an NFL divisional football playoff game against the Dallas Cowboys Saturday in Los Angeles.

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