Michael Brockers was asked last week what it has been like to face Tom Brady.
Brockers groaned, then emitted a word that starts with S, as in Super Bowl, and has three more letters, which happens to be one for each game in which the Rams defensive end has stared across the line of scrimmage at the great quarterback.
“He’s got the upper hand on us,” Brockers said. “I’ve faced him, I think, three times, and he’s 3-0 vs. the teams I was on. That’s the first thing that comes to mind.”
Brady is unbeaten against the St. Louis and L.A. Rams in Brockers’ nine years. Brady 5-1 against the Rams overall, winning five in a row since a 2001 regular-season loss. The game that gets the goat of many current Rams is the Super Bowl after the 2018 season, in which the GOAT didn’t play that well and he and the New England Patriots still won.
Brady, 43, is a Tampa Bay Buccaneer now, but the challenge for the Rams (6-3) doesn’t look any easier as they face the Bucs (7-3) at Raymond James Stadium on Monday night.
Coming off a convincing win over NFC West-leading Seattle and quarterback Russell Wilson, Rams defensive coordinator Brandon Staley calls Tampa Bay’s offense “the best collection of skill group players that we’ve faced.”
Tampa Bay receivers Antonio Brown, Mike Evans and Chris Godwin and tight end Rob Gronkowski have all played in the Pro Bowl. Former USC running back Ronald Jones is a top-10 rusher. And Brady is Brady.
“He’s the greatest. Probably will go down as the greatest of all time,” said Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey, who must try to shut down at least one of Brady’s targets. “I think I can leave it at that.”
In his five-game win streak against the Rams, Brady has thrown eight touchdown passes and one interception (by Cory Littleton in the Super Bowl). His one sack in the past three meetings also came in the Super Bowl (by John Franklin-Myers).
“He’s not going to let you really get a clean hit on him,” said defensive tackle Aaron Donald, who said the Rams must still try to “make him uncomfortable” and get their hands up when Brady is throwing.
Brockers said frustrating Brady must start with slowing down Jones and fellow running back Leonard Fournette and forcing the Bucs to pass.
“We feel like if we can get up on this team, make them start throwing the ball around, get after the quarterback a little bit, we feel like we have a good chance,” Brockers said.
Brady has been sacked three times in each of three games this season, and the Bucs are 0-3 in those games.
Brady’s presence can distract from the fact that Tampa Bay’s defense actually is its defense. This is a meeting of the teams allowing the fewest and third-fewest yards per play in the NFL, the Rams (4.8) and the Bucs (4.9). The Bucs are especially hard to run against, and they’re fourth in the league in sacks (3.2 a game), led by edge rushers Jason Pierre-Paul and Shaquille Barrett and ex-Rams lineman Ndamukong Suh.
The onus is on Jared Goff and the Rams’ passing game. Goff recovered from a festival of fumbles and interceptions in the loss at Miami to play efficiently against Seattle. But he and his receivers hope to be more explosive.
It’s not ideal timing. With left tackle Andrew Whitworth out with a knee injury, Joe Noteboom will make his first NFL start at the position. Also going on injured reserve Tuesday were safety Taylor Rapp and kicker Kai Forbath. The new kicker will be either newly signed Matt Gay or practice-squad member Austin MacGinnis. An unidentified Rams player tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday and prompted the team to cancel practice Wednesday.
Goff hopes the game against the Bucs, the NFC’s No. 5 seed if the regular season stopped now, will be a step toward the playoffs for the Rams, currently No. 6.
“We have a lot of guys that have made runs and are veterans,” said Goff, who believes Rams players and coaches have “an understanding of how it goes and how to get on a run and how to win four, five, six, seven, eight games in a row.”
A victory at Tampa Bay would put the Rams in first place in the NFC West for the first time this season and move them up to third in the notional NFC seedings. Going into Sunday’s games, the top three teams in the division were separated by one game. The top seven in the conference were 1 1/2 games apart in a year when Brady’s arrival from the AFC helped to make it tougher.
At least the Rams should be used to East Coast trips (they’re 2-2 in those) and night games (2-1), including Monday night (they beat Chicago on a Monday in October).
The Rams sent out a stat suggesting that Goff has been Brady’s equal in recent prime time games, Goff passing for more yards (4,279-4,207) and touchdowns (25-21) on fewer attempts (561-596) in their past 15 starts at night, each man’s team going 9-6.
Goff batted away a question about going up against Brady, without fuss or curses.
“Obviously, all the respect in the world for him,” Goff said. “But I’m playing their defense and he’s playing ours. You knew you’d get that answer.
“But all the respect in the world for him.”
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November 23, 2020 at 04:57AM
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Rams try again to beat Tom Brady, facing Bucs on Monday night - OCRegister
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