Burn This Play! That moment when Sean McVay lost his mind

In 2018, Sean McVay was considered the NFL’s greatest offensive play-caller. Doug Farrar explains how far things have fallen this season.

Each week, Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar will review one play that, due to an embarrassing use of scheme or personnel or situational awareness or a lethal combination of all three, should be removed from the playbook, set ablaze and never seen again. This week, let’s take a look at how one desperate coach — Sean McVay of the Rams — went rogue as his team seemed unable to remember how to score offensive touchdowns.

It’s safe to say that, one season after he took his Los Angeles Rams to the Super Bowl and was officially declared the greatest offensive play-designer in the NFL, head coach Sean McVay is searching desperately for answers. His offense has dropped from second in Football Outsiders’ opponent-adjusted efficiency metrics in 2018 to 21st in 2019. Behind a patchwork offensive line and let down by a suddenly unspectacular rushing attack, quarterback Jared Goff has — depending on your opinion of him — either regressed severely or simply found his true level as a mediocre quarterback who needs everything going right around him to succeed.

Goff’s touchdown percentage has dropped from 5.7% to 3.1%. His adjusted net yards per pass attempt (ANY/A) has gone from 7.69 to 6.22. And like his entire offense, Goff’s DVOA rating has plummeted — from fifth in 2018 to 24th in 2019. Per Pro Football Focus, Goff led the NFL with 16 touchdown passes off play-action in 2018; this year, through nine games in 2018, he has just one.

Perhaps the most embarrassing distillation of McVay’s offense this season came last Sunday when the Rams lost to the Steelers, 17-12. The Rams scored their points on a Dante Fowler fumble return for a touchdown, a sack of Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Rudolph for a safety, and a Greg Zuerlein field goal. Goff, who completed 22 of 41 passes for 243 yards and two interceptions, didn’t get near the end zone. On the day, the Rams’ offensive drives ended thusly: punt, punt, punt, punt, punt, fumble, punt, missed field goal, interception, interception, field goal, punt, punt, downs, interception.

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Jared Goff absorbs a hit from Pittsburgh Steelers defensive end Cameron Heyward in Sunday’s game. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

Wait — that’s three interceptions, you may be asking? I thought Goff only threw two? Well, we’re about to get to that. The weirdest part of this total offensive failure came with 8:33 left in the third quarter. The Steelers were up 14-7, and Goff had thrown his first interception of the day to end the Rams’ previous drive. Now, McVay had third-and-2 to deal with after Todd Gurley’s 9-yard run on first down, and Goff’s second-down pass to tight end Tyler Higbee that lost a yard. At this point, the Rams had gone 13 consecutive possessions without an offensive touchdown.

So, McVay thought outside the box. WAY outside the box. Goff was hit hard by cornerback Mike Hilton on a blitz, causing him to throw quickly on the second-down play, and he left the field with what appeared to be a minor injury. In Goff’s stead entered backup Blake Bortles, who had taken only three snaps all season.

Then this happened.

Bortles botched the snap — he looked surprised by it, in fact — and ran to his right after what appeared to be a completely busted play for a 1-yard gain. One could assume this was the result of a bad quarterback coming in cold and trying to execute an offense he doesn’t yet understand. But Bortles was signed to a one-year contract in March after five up-and-down seasons with the Jaguars; you’d think he’d get the zone-read packages enough to avoid junk like this.

(Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images)

After the game, McVay revealed that this was all part of the plan.

“Unfortunately, for us, that was one of the first times in the game, and it didn’t happen until the third quarter, that we really had a third-and-short situation come up,” McVay said. “There was a couple of things that we had potentially discussed as far as using Blake Bortles, his skill set — he’s a quarterback, but he also has some running threat. That was a play and kind of a package, if you will, that we had worked.”

In other words, they had practiced a play in which Jared Goff came off the field and Blake Bortles came into the game as a misbegotten option quarterback.

While you’re still marinating in that particular genius, it behooves us to explain what happened next. On fourth-and-1, McVay called something that had worked in the past — a fake-punt pass from Johnny Hekker. Before this play, Hekker had completed 11 of 20 passes for 179 yards and a touchdown in his seven-year career. He had never thrown an interception.

Until Sunday. This wasn’t even a fake punt per se — McVay basically threw Hekker out there as his third quarterback on fourth down. The Rams started off in a punt formation, but then motioned to a 3-by-2 empty set. Perhaps in a show of solidarity with Goff, Hekker looked a lot like Goff has all season when under pressure.

Not that this was all Hekker’s fault — since the Rams had special teams personnel on the field, there were no actual offensive linemen in his offensive line, and no top-tier receivers among his targets. Hekker may have been McVay’s most effective quarterback at that point in the game, so why not give him half a chance with offensive personnel?

“There was a certain look that we had, and it wasn’t quite exactly what we were looking for on the fake punt,” McVay explained after the game. “Johnny Hekker does a great job of recognizing those. Some of those things that you end up being able to activate in a game, if it doesn’t always work out the way we want, when you’ve got the right kind of guys like you do in Johnny Hekker and [special teams coach] John Fassel, we learn from it the right way. We use it as a chance to move forward in a positive manner when those situations present themselves in the future.”

Let’s hope so, for McVay’s sake. The Rams are now 5-4, losing ground to the 49ers and Seahawks in the NFL’s most top-heavy division, and if McVay is not able to wrangle some of last season’s brilliance, it will very quickly be a lost season for the Rams.

Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar has also covered football for Yahoo! Sports, Sports Illustrated, Bleacher Report, the Washington Post, and Football Outsiders. His first book, “The Genius of Desperation,” a schematic history of professional football, was published by Triumph Books in 2018 and won the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Nelson Ross Award for “Outstanding recent achievement in pro football research and historiography.”

Watch: Eagles WR DeSean Jackson lightly jogging 1-week after abdominal surgery

Philadelphia Eagles star wide receiver DeSean Jackson lightly jogging 1-week after abdominal surgery

If DeSean Jackson’s 2019 season is indeed over having core muscle surgery, the Eagles star wide receiver isn’t acting like it. Hoping to get back for the playoffs, Jackson has already started lightly jogging one week after having surgery on his abdominal area.

Jackson was initially given a four to six week recovery period and even if he takes the normal eight weeks for core muscle recovery, he could still possibly return for an Eagles playoff run if the team handles its business in his absence.

Former Bucs CB Vernon Hargreaves could be a player the Eagles have interest in claiming

Vernon Hargreaves could be a player the Eagles have interest in claiming

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers grew tired of Vernon Hargreaves and his antics, but could the former first-round pick be a player that the Eagles have interest in adding to the roster?

Two days after he was benched for lack of hustle, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers released starting cornerback Vernon Hargreaves on Tuesday morning.

“After thoughtful consideration over the past few weeks, Bruce and I came to the conclusion that we needed to make this change,” Buccaneer’s general manager Jason Licht said in a statement via ESPN.com. “
Hargreaves was the 11th overall pick in the 2016 draft out of the University of Florida.

Even with Cre’Von LeBlanc set to return to the roster, Hargreaves could be a good fit for an Eagles defense looking for a standout cornerback.

Hargreaves started all 16 games for the Buccaneers as a rookie, and had his best season as a pro, logging 76 tackles and two forced turnovers. The past two seasons have seen Hargreaves really struggle with injuries and inconsistency.

He missed half of his second season with a hamstring issue and all but one game last season after injuring his shoulder.

Hargreave would fit well in Jim Schwartz man to man defense, a style he was astute at coming out of college.

His physical play marvels Rasul Douglas’s style and he’s still playing on his rookie deal.

Because he was waived, Hargreaves will be subjected to the waiver process, meaning the other 31 NFL teams around the league will have an opportunity to place a claim before he can become an unrestricted free agent.

Still in his fourth-year, Hargreaves would carry a salary into 2020 of $9.954 million after the Buccaneers exercised his fifth-year option prior to the season.

Watch as 6-3, 300-pound Ohio University OL does cartwheel during pass play

Western Michigan OL Hunter Shulfer executed a perfect cartwheel on a pass play against Ohio.

Hagen Meservy is a 6-foot-3, 300-pound junior for Ohio.

You would not expect him to line up as a wide receiver — okay, he fits the wide part — but that is exactly what he did against Western Michigan in a MAC game Tuesday.

And watch as he executes a perfect cartwheel to serve as a diversion on a pass play. Meservy sticks the landing and gets a 10.  A great call by coach Frank Solich.

Of course, Ohio completed the pass play and got its own 10 … a first and 10.

Worth a second look.

NFL flexes Packers-Niners to Sunday Night Football on Week 12

The Green Bay Packers-San Francisco 49ers game on Nov. 24 has been flexed to SNF.

NBC is going to be the beneficiary of an audible by the NFL on Week 12.

Instead of a battle of the Birds, between the Seahawks and Eagles, on Sunday night Nov. 24, the NFL has moved the Packers-Niners game to that evening.

The Seahawks-Eagles game wasn’t shabby but Aaron Rodgers and Green Bay against Jimmy Garoppolo and the Niners must have seemed a bigger lure when it comes to TV ratings.

Have to wonder if the league is reacting to the ratings from MNF’s spectacular Seattle-San Francisco game.

And one more note involving the suddenly fashionable Niners.

Eagles’ Week 12 matchup with Seahawks moved from Sunday Night Football to 1 p.m.

Eagles Week 12 matchup with Seahawks flexed off of Sunday Night

There was some discussion of it a few weeks ago, but now it’s official. The NFL announced the Eagles vs. Seahawks Week 12 matchup has been moved from Sunday Night Football and will kick off at 1 p.m. ET.

The NFL set up its schedules with the flexibility to move certain late-season games around, thus avoiding low ratings when two poorly performing teams match up.

NFL rules state that Sunday night games can start being flexed as early as Week 5.

The league bases the decision off of the possibility that two hotter teams could possibly take that spot on NBC’s Sunday Night Football.

The NFL has deemed the Packers vs. 49ers matchup as the bigger game. For the Eagles, the flex isn’t necessarily that bad, and with the Seahawks traveling east, the early start could play in the Birds favor.

 

Private workout for QB Colin Kaepernick to be held in Atlanta

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, a workout for former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick will be held on Saturday in Atlanta.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, a workout for former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick will be held on Saturday in Atlanta.

All 32 NFL teams are invited to attend and will get the chance to interview Kaepernick, Schefter said. The league will also make a video of the workout and interview available to each team.

Kaepernick, who last played in 2016, has thrown for 12,271 yards, 72 touchdowns and 30 interceptions for a passer rating of 88.9. He’s rushed for an additional 2,300 yards and 13 touchdowns over his 69 career games.

UPDATE: Kaepernick has since confirmed the report on Twitter:

[lawrence-related id=41642]

[vertical-gallery id=41462]

What we know about Colin Kaepernick’s NFL workout

Former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, out of pro football since 2016, has potential path back to NFL employment.

The long tug-of-war between the NFL and Colin Kaepernick might actually be reaching a state of détente.

As first reported by ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the league itself has arranged a workout for the ex-49ers quarterback, who hasn’t played in the NFL since the end of the 2016 season. It will be held on Saturday at the Falcons’ facility in Flowery Branch, Georgia. The league sent out a memo about the workout to all 32 teams, and all teams have been invited to attend. There will be an on-field workout and an interview.

“Earlier this year, we discussed some possible steps with his representatives, and they recently emphasized his level of preparation and that he is ready to work out for clubs and be interviewed by them,” the memo said, in part. “We have therefore arranged this opportunity for him to work out, and for all clubs to have the opportunity to evaluate his current readiness and level of interest in resuming his NFL career.”

The workout will be run by Jeff Foster, the president of NFL Scouting, who is also responsible for determining which draft prospects will attend each scouting combine. Former head coaches Hue Jackson and Joe Philbin will help out; both coaches have a long track record of working with quarterbacks.

Per ESPN’s Chris Mortensen, the workout will start at 3:00 p.m. Eastern time. There will be a preliminary workout to start, with measurables presumably taken. At 4:00 p.m., there will be scripted passing drills with receivers. A videotaped interview will take place before the workout; this and video of the workouts will be given to all 32 NFL teams so that they can determine Kaepernick’s readiness to return to the league. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports that the Falcons will provide an equipment person, a trainer, and a videographer.

The NFL has not provided Kaepernick with a list of the receivers the league might make available for the workouts, so there is a possibility that Kaepernick will bring his own receivers. Generally speaking, for any pro day, combine, or mid-week workout, a quarterback will at least have a basic idea of the receivers he’ll be throwing to.

Last February, the NFL and Kaepernick’s representatives reached a settlement in the collusion grievance filed by Kaepernick and current Panthers safety Eric Reid. Both players believed that they had been effectively blacklisted from the league for their practice of kneeling for the national anthem before games to protest police brutality and other civil rights violations. Reid and Kaepernick played together in San Francisco from 2013 through 2016; Reid was subsequently signed by the Panthers in September 2018 and later signed a three-year contract extension.

Kaepernick, of course, hasn’t played at all since 2016, though there has been middling interest from a few teams. In his last NFL season, he threw 16 touchdowns and four interceptions for a 49ers team led by Chip Kelly that featured one of the poorest offensive rosters in the league. He also helped the 49ers reach Super Bowl XLVII at the end of the 2012 season, replacing Alex Smith halfway through the season after Smith suffered a concussion. Kaepernick was highly effective through the end of the 2014 season, as head coach Jim Harbaugh and offensive coordinator Greg Roman devised a series of schemes that made it difficult to defend him as a runner or passer.

Beyond the NFL’s possible desire to save face, the similarities between Kaepernick’s peak tenure in San Francisco and what’s currently going on in Baltimore might be a primary reason for the dam breaking now. Roman is now the Ravens’ offensive coordinator and the prime mover behind an offense that has Lamar Jackson throwing dimes all over the field and on pace to break Michael Vick’s single-season rushing record for a quarterback. That John Harbaugh, Jim’s brother, is presiding over it all? That just makes it more interesting.

“Yeah, to a degree,” John Harbaugh said last month when I asked if he’s talked to his brother (now the University of Michigan’s head coach) about the inner workings of the San Francisco offense. “I mean, he’s pretty busy, as you know. Over the course of the last year, we talked a little bit about those kinds of things. Jim is a great resource for that and a lot of other things, too. He’s a great coach, and I lean on him quite a bit.”

Perhaps the NFL, unable to figure out how to stop Jackson, would like to create a duplicate version that has already been proven to work?

The other option here — and given the NFL’s history in this matter, it must be discussed — is that this is a show to save face. Should Kaepernick look rusty after almost three years out of the league, or if he doesn’t answer questions the way coaches and executives prefer, it will be easy enough to say, “Hey, we gave him a shot. It didn’t work out, and it’s time to move on.”

Hopefully, Kaepernick will get a fair opportunity to show whether he’s still good enough to be an NFL quarterback. That’s all he’s asked since his status as an NFL quarterback was abruptly canceled.

Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar has also covered football for Yahoo! Sports, Sports Illustrated, Bleacher Report, the Washington Post, and Football Outsiders. His first book, “The Genius of Desperation,” a schematic history of professional football, was published by Triumph Books in 2018 and won the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Nelson Ross Award for “Outstanding recent achievement in pro football research and historiography.”

Eagles Wire discussion forum: Can Philadelphia make a playoff run without a true deep threat on the perimeter?

Can the Eagles make a playoff run without a true deep threat on the perimeter?

With the news that DeSean Jackson’s core muscle surgery will keep him out until at least the playoffs, the question has to be asked, can the Philadelphia Eagles make a lengthy playoff run without a true deep threat?

During the season opener, Jackson went off, catching two 50+ yard touchdowns and displaying the threatening deep speed that keeps coordinators up at night. Without Jackson, the Eagles are one of the worst in the NFL at pushing the ball downfield.

Alshon Jeffery and Nelson Agholor have both underperformed at times, but Agholor’s inability to be a deep threat is most concerning. Mack Hollins has gone 200 offensive snaps without a catch, while JJ Arcega-Whiteside can’t get on the field. Eagles wide receivers have combined for 719 yards since Week 2, while the receiving corps rank 32nd in receiving yards per target, 31st in yards per reception and 30th in yards after the catch per The Athletic.

Jordan Matthews was recently signed, but he’s more of a possession style wide receiver and it’ll be interesting to see just how much of an effect he’ll have on the deep passing game.

We pose the question to you: Can the Eagles make a playoff run Share your thoughts and join the discussion at the Eagles Wire forum.