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12.14.2008 6:52 pm

Big Stars Are Failing the St. Louis Rams

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Considering the huge financial investments the Rams have made in their contracts, running back Steven Jackson and quarterback Marc Bulger continue to come up short with the game on the line.

They are supposed to be two of the Rams’ key franchises pieces, right?

Then again, maybe that explains why the team is 2-12 this season and has the league’s worst record (5-25) since the beginning of the 2007 season.

First, Bulger:

The Rams have suffered three close losses this season, going down by 7 points at New England, 4 points to Miami, and 3 points on Sunday to Seattle.

Obviously victories were there, waiting to be claimed.  The winning QBs make plays to get that done. It’s not an easy job, but that’s why many veteran starting QBs make the big money. Bulger included.

And here’s what Bulger has done in the second half of the three narrow losses:

56 attempts

28 completions

298 yards

0 TDs

4 INTs

That computes to a quarterback rating of 36.1

In the fourth quarter of those losses, it’s even worse. Bulger has connected on only 17 of 37 passes (45.9 %) for 131 yards and three INTs with no TDs for a passer rating of 21.3.

That’s right: a QB rating of 21.3 when it’s late and close and tight.

That’s remarkably poor.  I don’t know what else to say. Bulger hasn’t had the best protection or receivers or rushing attack or game plans, but the Rams had a chance to win all three games, and that usually comes down to your top guns making plays, making the save. And Bulger hasn’t delivered. (I should also point out that the pass rush wasn’t an issue in the Miami and Seattle losses; Bulger had time to deal).

Sunday against the Seahawks, the Rams were protecting a 20-13 lead and had two late possessions that could have sealed a victory. But the Rams offense couldn’t stay on the field.  On the next-to-last drive, Bulger needed 9 yards on third down and threw a 7-yard pass to the tight end. What’s the point of that? After the punt the Seahawks drove for the tying (20-20) TD. Then on the final series, Bulger went back to pass three times, and all three throws failed to connect.  After the punt, Seattle scooted downfield for the winning FG. With the game on the line, No. 2 Seattle QB Seneca Wallace made plays for his team. Wallace isn’t making Bulger money, but he made money plays late Sunday afternoon.

Now, onto Jackson…

A trend has emerged over the last two seasons, and especially this season:

When in the lineup, Jackson starts fast, but he isn’t a finisher.

Since the start of the 2007 season, Jackson has 1,170 yards rushing in the first half and 606 yards rushing in the second half of games. Now to be fair to Jackson, those numbers are misleading on the surface because the Rams have trailed in so many games. They must throw the ball in the second half. But that said, he’s averaging 4.6 yards per carry in the first half, and 3.4 yards per carry in the second half.

This season, Jackson has rushed 118 times for 502 yards in the first half (4.2 per rush).  And he has 74 carries for 272 yards (3.6 per rush) in the second half.

It’s more glaring in the fourth quarter of games this season; Jackson has 75 yards on 27 rushes for an average of only 2.7 yards per carry. Wow.

The real conversation starter is this: will Jackson ever be able to hold up as a feature back?

Can he go strong to the finish line?

Or will he continue to crawl to the finish line?

The Rams last two home losses were close. The 16-12 loss to the Dolphins and the 23-20 setback to the Seahawks were crying out for a Rams’ leader to take charge. Jackson is supposed to be a game-changing, franchise-altering back. A dominator.  But against the Dolphins and Seahawks, Jackson faded in the fourth quarter.

Against Miami, though Jackson rushed for 94 yards overall, he had one fourth-quarter carry.

Against Seattle, though Jackson rushed for 91 yards overall, he had 4 carries for 5 yards in the fourth quarter.

In the Miami game, Jackson either pulled himself from the game (coach Jim Haslett’s original version) or was pulled from the game by the coaches (Jackson’s version) due to lingering stiffness from a thigh injury.  To this day, the reason for Jackson being on the sideline still isn’t clear. No one will say whether he begged out, or if the coaches yanked him as a precautionary measure.

Sunday against Seattle, Haslett described Jackson as “lightheaded” late in the game. Haslett said the doctors told him that Jackson wasn’t cleared to play.  That’s why Jackson wasn’t on the field for the first two plays of the Rams’ final possession when the Rams had a chance to put the Seahawks away.  He entered on third down, to serve as a decoy.  But the Rams went 3-and-out and punted. Jackson hinted after the game that he wanted to be on the field but wasn’t allowed to enter the game.

I don’t doubt that Jackson wants to play.

But again, this comes down to durability and stamina.

The great backs are as strong, fresh and effective in the fourth quarter as they are in the first quarter.  Some of the Hall of Fame RBs even seemed to get better as the game went on; Walter Payton and Emmitt Smith come to mind.

Jackson is a very talented back.  But this is his fifth NFL season, and Jackson is already into his second big contract. The Rams are still waiting for him to be the kind of back who takes over games, and Jackson still  isn’t close to making that happen.

-B

24 comments

Comments are closed.

Bulger is physically unable to perform due to inherent limitations, age, and punch-drunkenness. He is a QB lightweight.

Jackson is physically unable to perform due to self imposed limitations concerning physical fitness that date back to last summer. He has wasted his most productive years in the NFL lazing around in the offseason. He is a part time player.

— LordBaden
8:38 pm December 14th, 2008

I know that you’re not comparing Jackson to Walter Peyton or Emmitt Smith but please in the future don’t tarnish these two Hall of Famers by even putting their names in the same article with Jackson. He doesn’t deserve it and they certainly don’t deserve it. If you ever really want to understand where Jackson comes from just one time listen to his post-game comments. Me, I, mine. VERY seldom does the word team escape his lips. He needs to do his job, and that means begin in camp and finish on the field. He cannot do it or he doesn’t want to do it. What a waste of potential.

— Big Rich 99
8:51 pm December 14th, 2008

Bernie - good call on Bulger’s play, or lack there of, in tight games. I have always argued that even when Bulger put up the nice stats, many of those passes/yards are in garbage time. I think a QB’s record is the most important stat…not total receptions/yards, which I think lead to Bulger’s big contract.

I am not sure why the Rams invested so heavy on a running back that has not proven his ability to stay healthy.

Last comment on Haslett…..I think he has missed his moment of opportunity with the team and fans. Take the Incognito example…he keeps the clown around after he almost solely loses the Washnington game…then the bum mocks the fans….and how has Incognito repaid Haslett?? 4 penalties today! Haslett could made a low risk sacrafice of Incognito to “stop the buck” of circus behavior on the team. If the team keeps losing, Haslett could have made the arguement to Rosenblum at season’s end that he is in the process of cleaning house. Instead, Incognito joins the list of bozos such as Dominique Byrd, Wroten, the DE from Georgia Tech (whose name escapes me), etc. who were given too many chances only to dissapoint in the end. You can see this one coming….Incognito will finally go too far and will be released sometime down the road. This is just one example.
Is Bulger’s campaign for a Haslett return really a good thing for Haslett? It reminds me of George Bush endorsing McCain.

— DerekM
8:53 pm December 14th, 2008

To Mike Smith or whatever admin is reading this, can we please get Alann removed/banned from this board/page? No need/place for that kind of nonsense here.

As for the blog post, kudos Bernie. As always, you let the research and analysis do the talking for you. Wish more guys out there would do the same, but there it is. As for this team…sigh…what to do? Someone HAS to be brought in to challenge Bulger next year. There’s multiple ways to go about it…find a quality veteran, take a flyer on a 3rd/4th rounder in the draft…but do something, because I’m afraid it’s curtains for Marc at this point.

— brignatious
9:46 pm December 14th, 2008

Easy Al/Ann=+ Hermaphadiate (spelling) !!

— zenonator
10:04 pm December 14th, 2008

I said in trainning camp to let him go. He and Bulger need to go. I know it will mean big cap hit. What hs been doen with this team is so bcakwards that you do know where to start to fix it. With MB & SJ money that makes it hard to make some of the moves that you need.

— slotalk
10:16 pm December 14th, 2008

Unbelievable. Bernie, did you watch the game today? You still have to write and rip on the two guys who actually did something good today! You are correct in the fact that traditionally Bulger and Jackson have not been good in the second half. But when has any body else stepped up in the second half? How about the defense as soon as the second half started? TERRIBLE! How about the offensive line run blocking in the second half? TERRIBLE! (I sit in the end zone and see no holes open up. But I watch Seattle’s offensive line make huge hole after huge hole in the second half) Rip on someone who should be ripped on. Klopfenstein? Lost all momentum we had for the rest of the game on his terrible fumble. TERRIBLE! Haslett and Saunders? I haven’t seen a half time adjustment from this team in over 3 YEARS!! Saunders? His play calling is so predictable! (Slant, quick throw on the sideline, slant, quick throw on the sideline, slant) Bulger had an excellent game and then is comes down to the last drive and NO ONE ON THE OFFENSE MADE A PLAY! NOT BULGER, NOT JACKSON, NOT HOLT and more importantly NOT SAUNDERS!!!!!! Then are defense comes back and Atogwe gets whooped! He as played pretty well all year, except getting beat, and beat BAD! There are a lot more problems than Bulger and Jackson not playing well in the second half. Rip on guys like Haslett. It is HIS (now that Linehan is gone) defense that got smashed right out of the gate in the second half. Rip on guys like Saunders who doesn’t know how to mix things up and keep the defense off balance. And rip on guys like Incognito who tried to kill drive after drive after drive with his terrible penalties.

And to most of the fans – stop going to the games waiting and wanting to boo Bulger! Not one quarterback in the league could fix the problems with this team.

— jneuber7
10:42 pm December 14th, 2008

Boy, Bernie, normally I like your stuff, but this column was nothing more than simple, and I emphasize the word “simple,” scapegoating. Was either Bulger or Jackson to blame for Klop’s fumble, Stanley’s fumble, Atogwe’s blown coverage, the many missed tackles, or the D not showing up at crunch time? Your analysis was both simplistic and convenient, and it pandered to the prevailing sentiment that Bulger and Jackson are to blame for everything that is wrong with the Rams.

The fans deserve better, more thoughtful analysis than what you provided today.

— NAZRamFan
12:19 am December 15th, 2008

The two previous posters are missing the point!!!! Bulger and Jackson ARE the problem, and have been for the past two years…Bernie supplies glaring statistics to support his claim. These guys are being paid silly amounts of money to be the go-to guys when it counts — not Stanley, Klop, etc.. The only thing they have delivered is garbage… their 4th QTR numbers are PATHETIC!

I agree with Slotalk…screw the cap hit..we need to get rid of these two posers and replace them with guys who can deliver the goods when it counts — in the fourth quarter.

— Ramrod60
6:44 am December 15th, 2008

Good points Bernie, I didn’t realize that the stats dropped off that much in the second half. Could you check the second half stats for the top backs in the league? I’m always hearing that a big back can wear down a defense and start ripping it up late in the game. Is this true? Do the stats support this common theory? Too bad Jackson keeps getting hurt and can’t stay on the field at the end of the game when we really need him.

— Aston Villian
7:17 am December 15th, 2008

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