Secret Superstars of the NFL’s conference championship games

Arik Armstead, Tyler Higbee, Sam Hubbard, and Juan Thornhill are four underrated players whose presence could mean a lot in the championship games.

Matthew Stafford. Joe Burrow. Patrick Mahomes. Nick Bosa. Aaron Donald. Cooper Kupp. Odell Beckham Jr. Tyreek Hill. Ja’Marr Chase. Deebo Samuel.

The Conference Championship games for the 2021 NFL season are filled with some of the league’s biggest names, and justifiably so. But every big game also has “smaller” names who rise up at the right time to make things happen when they’re most needed.

Here’s one under-the-radar player for each of the four remaining teams in the tournament, whose exploits could swing things in the directions of their franchises on the way to Super Bowl LVI.

NFC Championship preview: How the 49ers can beat the Rams

The San Francisco 49ers and the Los Angeles Rams meet for the third time this season, now with a trip to the Super Bowl on the line. Here is how the 49ers beat the Rams.

And then, there were two.

NFC West rivals square off Sunday with a trip — or at least a short excursion — to Super Bowl LVI on the line. When the Los Angeles Rams kick things off against the San Francisco 49ers, it will be the third meeting this year between these two franchises.

Unfortunately for the Rams and their fans, the first two meetings did not go their way.

Back in Week 10, the 49ers won in dominant fashion, topping the Rams by a final score of 31-10. That game was perhaps notable for how the 49ers began the game, putting together an 18-play drive that covered over 11 minutes of game time, nearly the entire first quarter, that gave the 49ers an early 7-0 lead.

San Francisco followed that with a Pick-Six of Matthew Stafford on the Rams’ ensuing possession, and things were trending in their direction early.

Then in Week 18, with quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo dealing with a thumb injury and the 49ers needing a win to get into the playoffs, San Francisco pulled out a three-point win in overtime, setting the stage for their playoff run.

So how does the third meeting between these teams play out? Do the 49ers make it a perfect 3-0 against the Rams on the season, or does Los Angeles become the second-straight team to play a Super Bowl in their home stadium?

Here is what the 49ers have to do to beat the Rams.

NFC Championship preview: How the Rams can beat the 49ers

The three things the Rams need to do against the 49ers to advance to the Super Bowl.

And then, there were two.

NFC West rivals square off Sunday with a trip — or at least a short excursion — to Super Bowl LVI on the line. When the Los Angeles Rams kick things off against the San Francisco 49ers, it will be the third meeting this year between these two franchises.

Unfortunately for the Rams and their fans, the first two meetings did not go their way.

Back in Week 10, the 49ers won in dominant fashion, topping the Rams by a final score of 31-10. That game was perhaps notable for how the 49ers began the game, putting together an 18-play drive that covered over 11 minutes of game time, nearly the entire first quarter, that gave the 49ers an early 7-0 lead.

San Francisco followed that with a Pick-Six of Matthew Stafford on the Rams’ ensuing possession, and things were trending in their direction early.

Then in Week 18, with quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo dealing with a thumb injury and the 49ers needing a win to get into the playoffs, San Francisco pulled out a three-point win in overtime, setting the stage for their playoff run.

So how does the third meeting between these teams play out? Do the 49ers make it a perfect 3-0 against the Rams on the season, or does Los Angeles become the second-straight team to play a Super Bowl in their home stadium?

Here is what the Rams have to do to beat the 49ers.

Watching tape (again) with Buccaneers tight end Rob Gronkowski

Rob Gronkowski’s 2021 season may be over, but he was happy to watch tape from that season with Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar.

With 42 seconds left in the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ divisional round playoff game against the Los Angeles Rams last Sunday, Bucs running back Leonard Fournette scored a touchdown from nine yards out. That put the score at 27-27, and gave the Bucs a most impressive comeback from a 27-3 deficit halfway through the third quarter. At that point, everybody assumed that Tom Brady was going to do his usual Tom Brady thing, and the Bucs were going to progress in their quest to Run it Back.

Then, Matthew Stafford did a new Matthew Stafford thing, driving his Rams down the field, Matt Gay kicked a game-winning 30-yard field goal as time expired, and just like that, Tampa Bay’s season was over.

Right after that, the futures of Brady and longtime teammate Rob Gronkowski were questioned. Would Brady come back for his age 45 NFL season, and would Gronk follow?

This, we do not yet know.

What we do know is that Gronk isn’t one of those guys who refuses to watch the playoffs after he’s eliminated. From January 24-February 2, Groupon is inviting fans to enter daily for a chance to win an over-the-top Big Game viewing experience at Gronkā€™s 4,486 square-foot home in Foxborough, Mass. for themselves and up to 15 friends for a once in a lifetime experience that most football fans could only dream of. The grand prize winner will be flown to Boston to take over Gronkā€™s house for a watch party complete with local Groupon experiences (indoor bounce house, anyone?) that will ensure this is one epic party.

Fans who arenā€™t selected as the grand prize winner will still have the chance to enter through Feb. 20, to win and experience one of many other bonus baller prizes that Groupon has to offer, including:

  • A trip for two to Las Vegas from MGM
  • A trip for two to Cancun from Great Value Vacations
  • VIP New Kids on the Block Concert Experience from Live Nation (See them on their Mixtape Tour Summer 2022!)
  • Blue Man Group Experience in NYC or Chicago

Fans can learn more and enter to win at www.partylikeaplayer.com.

“I teamed up with Groupon, and I love their experiences,” Gronk told me this week. “Iā€™ve been aware of Groupon for a long time, so when this opportunity was presented, I heard it out and thought it was a great idea. We came up with the idea to have an ultimate Super Bowl party. I mean, I play in the NFL, and Groupon, theyā€™re the experienced pros at throwing things like this, and it was a boom-boom situation. It just made a lot of sense.Ā 

“Iā€™m known to partyā€¦ that was back in my heyday, when I used to get after it. I still love to have a good time, donā€™t get me wrong, and I think a Super Bowl party is the time to have a good time. Thatā€™s what makes football so great, and I actually learned that in my year off. I learned that why people love to watch the game so much is that you can watch the game and be doing many other things at the same time, and still know exactly whatā€™s going on in the game. Thatā€™s the kind of experience weā€™re throwing.

“You can be in an indoor bounce house in my basement. Indoor mini-golf. I mean, while youā€™re watching the game. I mean, I was watching games when I was retired, hanging with my friends. We were playing cornhole and busting each othersā€™ chops. Weā€™re talking, and then we look up, and boom! Itā€™s even more entertainment, because thereā€™s a big hit in the game, or a big play. Football just keeps you entertained the whole time, and while youā€™re also doing something else, like a party experience. So, this is just a boom-boom situation.”

Another boom-boom situation? Watching tape with the best tight end in NFL history when the opportunity presents itself. I was able to do this in late September, when Gronk was working through some early-season injuries…

Watching five plays from the 2021 season with Buccaneers TE Rob Gronkowski

…and he was happy to discuss more plays from the second half of the season, when he was healthy and looked like the Gronk we’re used to.

How Travis Kelce captained the Chiefs’ frantic 13-second drive against the Bills

Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce was the engineer of his team’s frantic 13-second drive to beat the Bills in the divisional round.

With 13 seconds left in regulation of the Chiefs-Bills divisional playoff game on Sunday, Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen hit receiver Gabriel Davis with a 19-yard touchdown pass. That was supposed to be the last salvo in a crazy two-minute drill for both teams that saw lead change after the lead change, but after Davis’ fourth touchdown of the game — a pro football postseason record — the Bills were supposed to have won this one.

We all know what happened next.

The Bills kicked off with a standard kick into the end zone as opposed to the squib kick that would have taken some of that 13 seconds off the clock, and Patrick Mahomes had all of those 13 seconds to come up with field goal position to make it a 36-36 tie, and send the thing into overtime.

One 19-yard pass to Tyreek Hill and one 25-yard pass to Travis Kelce later, the Chiefs had moved from their own 25-yard line to the Buffalo 31, which allowed Harrison Butker to boot the game-tying 49-yard field goal. The Chiefs bombarded the Bills defense in overtime to win the game and advance to their fourth straight AFC Championship game, but let’s go back to the drive that tied the game.

Mahomes, head coach Andy Reid, and offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy were all involved in the process, but as NFL Films shows us with its usual brilliance, it was Kelce who kept things straight on the two passes that put Butker in position to succeed.

First, he told Hill that the Bills were probably going to play man coverage on the first play, so Hill should go outside and come back in so that Kelce could “get in the way” to create room. Then, Kelce told Mahomes that the seam would be open on his catch, which it very much was.

It was an amazing demonstration of defensive awareness, and everything Kelce advised came true.

ā€œIt is a pretty common defense in a situation like that,” Kelce said after the game. “The defense will try and take away the sideline throws to give you more of the seams and the middle of the field open. That and they are soft so you can get a head start. I just told him right before they called a timeout right before we ran out there to run the play. I told him I am probably not going to run the route that is called. I am just going to run to the open area. Midway through his cadence, he was screaming at me at the line of scrimmage, ā€˜Do itā€™. ā€˜Do it. Do it.ā€™ I was just like, alright — here we go, boys. It was just a little backyard football with a couple of seconds left that gave us an opportunity to take the game into overtime.ā€

Mahomes was most appreciative after the video came out.

And Kelce responded in kind.

It will now be up to the Bengals to deal with this kind of crazy in the AFC Championship game.

If you want more snippets of Kelce’s football smarts, check out this game tape session from September.

Travis Kelce details the genius of the Chiefs’ passing game

One alternative idea to NFL’s current overtime rules

The debate over NFL overtime rules is white-hot again after Bills-Chiefs

The way the Buffalo Bills lost to the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday in an AFC Divisional Round game made the “unfairness” of NFL overtime rules percolate … again.

The Bills called the coin toss for overtime and were incorrect. The Chiefs took the ball and marched down the field for the game-winning touchdown.

Josh Allen and the Bills’ offense never saw the field.

That said, if the Bills won the toss, the cleat could have been on the other foot. And, of course, the stellar Buffalo defense could have found a way to stop KC or limit it to a field goal.

In 11 playoff games that went to overtime, the team that gets the ball first has won 10 ā€” seven with opening-drive TDs. That includes the Patriots wrecking the Falcons in Super Bowl LI.

In the regular season, the team that gets the ball first is 86-65-10, with 34 opening-drive touchdowns, according to Sportradar.Ā 

So. how can the NFL fix this perceived injustice in the postseason. The playoffs are different than the regular season, where games have a 10-minute extra period if the result isn’t settled by the end of that timeframe.

The problem with giving the Bills, or the second team, the ball and a chance to tie the game after a touchdown is game strategy becomes warped. Teams could go for it on ridiculous fourth-down situations they would never attempt under normal circumstances.

So, how to create a balance? The Chiefs took eight plays to go 75 yards for the game-winning TD that saw Travis Kelce catch a pass from Patrick Mahomes.

What if the Bills, or the second team, was given the same eight plays after the kickoff to score a touchdown?

The second team would have to attempt the same PAT the first team did.

After that, all would be fair.

If a team scored after taking the kickoff following the OT coin toss, in 1, 8 or 15 plays first, that would be the number of plays from scrimmage the second team would be given.

It levels the playing field … if you believe there needs to be an audible on the current rules. And that is a big if to be debated over and over and …

Rams’ final drive proves that Matthew Stafford is made for the big moment

Matthew Stafford took all the slings and arrows allotted to a “losing” quarterback, and shoved them right back in the faces of his doubters.

In Matthew Stafford’s 12-year tenure with the Lions from 2009 through 2020, the narrative on the quarterback was that he had as much talent as anyone at his position in the league, but the results were left wanting. There was far more talk of Stafford’s 74-90-1 “record” in the regular season, and 0-3 postseason mark, than there was around the fact that Stafford was generally playing from behind in a personnel sense. The Lions were able to select Stafford with the first overall pick in the 2009 draft because the Matt Millen era had just ended, and the 2008 Detroit team didn’t win a single game.

It takes a while to get past that kind of trauma.

So Stafford, who had the fifth-most attempts (6,224), the sixth-most completions (3,898), the seventh-most passing yards (45,109), and the seventh-most touchdowns (282) from 2009 through 2020, was dinged more for his relative inefficiency — he tied with Drew Brees for the fifth-most interceptions in that time with 144, his passer rating of 89.9 ranked 27th, and his Adjusted Net Yards per Pass Attempt of 6.32 ranked 24th.

When the Rams traded Jared Goff, two first-round picks, and a third-round pick to Detroit for Stafford before the 2021 season, head coach Sean McVay didn’t care about any of that — he saw a quarterback who could execute the ideal version of his passing game in ways that Goff never could.

ā€œThe way heā€™s able to see the field, you see [Aaron] Rodgers, [Patrick] Mahomes ā€” [who] have done an outstanding job of being able to move and manipulate coverage and change their arm slots, and Matthew has done a lot of those same things,ā€Ā McVay said of StaffordĀ around the time the trade was consummated. ā€œI think heā€™s got great wide-field vision, sees the field. Heā€™s able to speed it up if he has issues. Youā€™re watching a guy that if you watch the film, the game makes sense to him, and I really respect the lens that he sees it through.ā€

Stafford had his issues for a while in McVay’s offense — opponents were diving all over his quick reads for pick-sixes, and he didn’t always see things downfield as he needed to. But in Week 3, when the Rams beat the defending Super Bowl champion Buccaneers 34-24, Stafford completed 27 of 38 passes for 343 yards, four touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 134.0. Stafford was particularly devastating against the blitz, completing seven of nine passes for 147 yards and a touchdown against five or more rushers, and on the season, Stafford nuked blitzing defenses for 85 completions on 118 passes for 1,031 yards, 530 air yards, 14 touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 138.1 against the blitz. Stafford’s Positive Play Rate of 59.5% against the blitz is the NFLā€™s best ā€” Patrick Mahomes ranks second at 58.0%.

Still, in the divisional round rematch against the Bucs, and even when the Rams got out to a 27-3 lead… well, once the Bucs started their comeback, everyone assumed that the Tom Brady comeback was its usual inevitability, and that Stafford would fold in comparison as the sunshine soldier he was presumed to be.

But after Tampa Bay tied the game 27-27 on a nine-yard Leonard Fournette touchdown run with 42 seconds left, the script was already written — the game would go to overtime, Brady would rip the hearts out, and things would be as they always were.

Stafford had other ideas, and he expressed them in two perfect throws to Cooper Kupp. The first came with 35 seconds left in the game, and it was a 20-yard pass to Cooper Kupp.

Then, Stafford’s denouement — the 44-yard completion to Kupp against Tampa Bay defensive coordinator Todd Bowles’ Cover-0 all-out blitz.

That put the ball at the Tampa Bay 12-yard line, but the Rams also had to haul it to the line of scrimmage so that Stafford could clock the ball, and kicker Matt Gay could boot the 30-yard game-winner.

Which is exactly what happened.

There will be a lot of talk this offseason about the wisdom of that blitz, but whoever called Stafford a situational winner before is barbecuing crow for dinner. Stafford had less than a minute to counter the greatest quarterback and the greatest winner in NFL history, and on this day, he had everything it took to turn Brady’s tide back.

Aaron Donald does Aaron Donald things against the Buccaneers’ weak link

The Buccaneers were going to have a bad matchup if Aaron Donald lined up as an edge-rusher. If didn’t take long for that to happen.

In our divisional round preview detailing how the Buccaneers could fend off the Rams, we posited that Aaron Donald had a season-high 18 snaps at the edge in Los Angeles’ 34-24 Week 3 win over the Bucs, and with right tackle Tristan Wirfs out of the rematch due to a high ankle sprain, backup Josh Wells could be the Bucs’ vulnerability — especially if defensive coordinator Raheem Morris decided to put Donald on the defensive left side, leaving one-on-ones with Wells that could not work at all for Tom Brady.

It did not take long for Morris to stack this one up. With 7:30 left in the first quarter, Donald lined up right over Wells with no help (!!!), and the utterly predictable thing happened. Brady barely escaped a sack on an incomplete pass to Mike Evans.

Donald had a sack of Brady off the edge from the other side in Week 3, beating Rob Gronkowski and left tackle Donovan Smith…

…and Wells got absolutely demolished by Eagles pass-rusher Ryan Kerrigan for this sack in Tampa Bay’s wild-card win.

The Bucs are either going to have to give Wells some kind of chip help when Donald aligns outside, or up the level of Brady’s life insurance.

What Aaron Rodgers missed on the play that could have saved the Packers’ season

Aaron Rodgers had a chance to advance in the playoffs, but he missed an easy touchdown on his last throw against the 49ers.

It was a surprise to nobody that in the Packers’ 13-10 loss to the 49ers in the divisional round, Aaron Rodgers targeted receiver Davante Adams more than he targeted anybody else, and certainly more than any other receiver. When you have the NFL’s best receiver on your side, you don’t make it a secret. Adams was targeted 11 times, catching nine passes for 90 yards, but there were no touchdowns to be had — the only Packers touchdown in that loss came from a six-yard run fromĀ  A.J. Dillon on Green Bay’s first drive.

After that, it was crickets in the end zone for the NFL’s second-best passing offense (behind only the Buccaneers, per DVOA) throughout the regular season. As my Touchdown Wire colleague Mark Schofield detailed on Sunday morning, the 49ers and defensive coordinator DeMeco Ryans did a brilliant job of limiting Adams’ options with creative brackets, allowing them to keep Adams in check even when they played single-high coverage — usually a cheat code for both Rodgers and Adams.

Rodgers’ response to this was odd. He didn’t avail himself of his other receivers, which he usually does when restricted by coverage concepts that make things more difficult for Adams. Allen Lazard had one catch on one target for six yards. Randall Cobb, Rodgers’ best buddy, had no catches on one target. Rodgers will probably bring this up in the offseason to augment his belief that Green Bay’s front office needs to get him better receivers behind Adams, but Rodgers was the one at fault more often than not when you analyze how this all broke down.

Rodgers had just 55 passing yards in the second half of that game, and it’s his final passing attempt of the contest that will haunt him. With 3:40 left in the game, and third-and-11 from his own 28-yard line, Rodgers had the touchdown that would have put the Packers up 17-10, and put Jimmy Garoppolo on the clock — but he simply didn’t see it. It was odd to see perhaps the most physically gifted thrower of the football in NFL history miss an easy score as he did here.

Both the broadcast angles and the All-22 told the same sad story.

The 49ers dropped into Cover-3, with safeties Jimmie Ward and Jaquiski Tartt blitzing, and Talanoa Hufanga as the deep safety cheating to Adams’ side. Generally speaking, this is why playing single-high against the Packers is a nightmare — even if you do bracket Adams, someone else is going to be very open.

In this case, both Equanimeous St. Brown (who had cornerback Emmanuel Moseley dead to rights from the seam to the numbers) and Lazard (who was wide open on the deep in route) would have created explosive plays had Rodgers thrown the ball anywhere near them, and in St. Brown’s case, that’s most likely an easy six.

“Iā€™ve got to go back and look at the tape and Iā€™ll be able to answer that question for you better,” head coach Matt LaFleur said after the game, when asked why there weren’t more targets for guys not named Davante Adams or running back Aaron Jones. “I think the majority of our pass concepts do run through Davante, and thatā€™s been the case all season long. We obviously didnā€™t do a good enough job of having the right concepts called or whatever it is, but I got to go back and look at the tape.”

Rodgers knew where the responsibility should land.

“I didnā€™t have a great night tonight,” he said. “They did a good job of kind of getting me off the spot and a better job of taking away some of the quick game that we got going the last time we played them, and I just missed a couple reads. I probably should have taken a couple hole shot chances at certain times, and then obviously if I hit Allen [Lazard] on that deep-in on the last drive, that probably gets out to about midfield and weā€™re a couple first downs away from being in field goal range, so Iā€™m definitely disappointed by some of those decisions that I had tonight. So, yeah, I definitely take my fair share of blame tonight.ā€

When Rodgers looks back and sees St. Brown past Moseley, that will be an even more bitter pill.

Twitter takes its shots with Aaron Rodgers jabs after Packers’ upset loss

Aaron Rodgers found that after he had no shot against the 49ers, it was impossible to be immune from Twitter jabs.

After the 49ers sent the Packers packing with a shocking 13-10 upset that was more about Green Bay’s abysmal special teams than anything Aaron Rodgers did or didn’t do, social media was all over the Packers’ future Hall of Fame quarterback nonetheless.

It probably had something to do with Rodgers’ interesting year, in which he initially questioned his own commitment to his team and then performed at an MVP level for the most part, but it really had to do with the COVID conspiracy theories Rodgers frequently espoused on the Pat McAfee Show, and in a recent interview with ESPN’s Kevin Van Valkenberg.

Aaron Rodgers snarks back at “woke mob” who would criticize his vaccination options

“I don’t want to apologize for being myself,” Rodgers told Van Valkenberg. “I just want to be myself.”

All well and good, but after that playoff loss, Twitter was all about the Rodgers jokes — as they say, freedom of speech does not immunize one from consequence.