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Why CJ Anderson is a better fit for the Rams O right now than Todd Gurley...

February 01, 2019 01:54PM
[www.si.com]

Why C.J. Anderson Is a Better Fit for the Rams' Offense Than Todd Gurley Right Now

By Andy Benoit/ February 01, 2019


ATLANTA—Walking into the tunnel at halftime in Week 16 at Arizona, Rams veteran center John Sullivan pulled aside C.J. Anderson, who had signed just days earlier, and asked the one question that has followed the soon-to-be 28-year-old running back since: “How on Earth were you available!?”

Anderson’s cliff-noted answer: He was wedged out by younger (cheaper) running backs in Denver, never got on the field in Carolina thanks to Christian McCaffrey playing 91.3 percent of the snaps and was sacrificed after just one week in Oakland when injuries demanded reinforcements along the offensive line.

The Rams only signed Anderson because, with No. 2 tailback Malcolm Brown seriously injuring his clavicle in Week 13 at Detroit, they eventually needed someone to fill in while Todd Gurley nursed a knee injury in Weeks 16 and 17. Not a soul would have guessed Anderson could play well enough to supplant Gurley, who over the summer signed a deal worth $45 million guaranteed. But in the NFC Championship, that’s exactly what happened.

The Rams insist Gurley’s injured right knee is healed, and recall that in his first game back—the divisional round stomping of Dallas—he looked vibrant, rushing for 115 yards on 16 carries. (For what it’s worth, Anderson that night had 123 yards on 23 carries.)

There’s an explanation for L.A.’s unlikely shift in backfield power: Gurley might be the more talented all-around player, but stylistically, Anderson is the better schematic fit. The Rams employ a classic outside zone running scheme. On outside zone runs, a ballcarrier directs his run toward the perimeter, but with the hope that he’ll find an inside cutback lane along the way. Anderson is great at spotting and exploiting those cutback lanes. He runs low to the ground with keen vision and deceptively loose hips, which allow him to work through small cracks and elude defenders within confined areas.

Gurley, on the other hand, is a higher-velocity runner but with buildup speed. His top gear bests Anderson’s by several notches, but it takes Gurley longer to reach that top gear. (This is why he’s more feared running outside than inside; outside runs take longer to develop.) Gurley also has tighter hips. This isn’t to say he’s stiff, but fluid change-of-direction has never been his forte. Consider the entirety of Gurley’s traits and it’s easy to understand why he’s more feared as an outside runner than inside runner. Outside runs lend more time for building velocity.

The problem is, outside runs are not consistently available in the NFL. They’re especially not available against the Patriots, who put a premium on setting the edge. When you set the edge properly, the widest-aligned line of scrimmage defender acts as a wall that forces the ball to stay inside. When asked this week, “Besides setting the edge, what’s the biggest key for you guys stopping the outside zone run game?” Patriots defensive lineman Trey Flowers still instinctively answered “setting the edge.”

Flowers told me the same thing about L.A.’s ground game as dozens of other players this week: the Rams call the same plays for Gurley and Anderson, but those plays pan out differently because the two are such different runners.

Typically what keeps a recently-signed running back from vaulting to the top of the depth chart is pass protection. It can be difficult to pick up an offense’s blocking rules, and the consequences for not picking them up terrifies offensive coaches.

But “we’re in our first pressure meeting and it was very clear from the start that C.J. had a lot of thoughts on protection,” Sullivan said. “He had opinions, he was willing to communicate them, he was willing to listen to other people, listen to how we see it in our system. Go back to the Arizona game. Look at the job he did without the ball in his hands. He was amazing right from the start.”

In the other phase of the passing game—receiving—Anderson is not as threatening as Gurley, but this season Gurley himself has not quite been as threatening as he was a year ago. His receiving yards have dropped from 52 per game to 41, as the Rams have not featured him on designer backfield screens as aggressively as last year. That’s almost certainly an unintended byproduct of this offense’s evolution, not a philosophical shift from Sean McVay. But however it shakes out, Los Angeles’s passing game has become subtly less dependent on Gurley.

Anderson has praised McVay and L.A.’s staff for putting players in position to succeed. “They’re not asking us to do something we have not done or maybe can’t do,” he said. “They’re not even testing those waters.” Anderson also said this week, “This is Todd’s football team.”Long-term, yes. But don’t be surprised if this Sunday it again looks more like C.J.’s.
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

  Why CJ Anderson is a better fit for the Rams O right now than Todd Gurley...

Rams43700February 01, 2019 01:54PM

  Re: so again people keep asking about Todd

Speed_Kills289February 01, 2019 02:08PM

  if that's the real issue

zn450February 01, 2019 02:27PM

  Gurley's "fit"

21Dog407February 01, 2019 02:30PM

  Re: Gurley's "fit"

zn222February 01, 2019 02:33PM

  Re: Gurley's "fit"

21Dog277February 01, 2019 02:41PM

  Re: Gurley's "fit"

zn234February 01, 2019 03:02PM

  Depend on me to be the contrarian...

JamesJM231February 01, 2019 03:12PM

  Re: Depend on me to be the contrarian...

zn235February 01, 2019 03:24PM

  Re: Depend on me to be the contrarian...

JamesJM162February 01, 2019 03:26PM

  Re: Yup that is what the article says

Speed_Kills173February 01, 2019 04:27PM

  Re: Yup that is what the article says

zn170February 01, 2019 04:51PM

  Re: Yup that is what the article says

Speed_Kills164February 01, 2019 05:01PM

  Re: Yup that is what the article says

zn159February 02, 2019 06:40AM

  Re: I give up

Speed_Kills164February 02, 2019 06:56AM

  we're talking past each other

zn161February 02, 2019 07:02AM

  Re: we're talking past each other

Speed_Kills159February 02, 2019 07:12AM

  Re: we're talking past each other

zn158February 02, 2019 09:17AM

  CJ Anderson reduces McVays reliance on 11 personnel

Speed_Kills160February 01, 2019 05:17PM

  Re: Really

Speed_Kills169February 01, 2019 04:02PM

  Re: Gurley runs better in space

Speed_Kills175February 01, 2019 03:53PM

  Re: Gurley runs better in space

Razorback214February 02, 2019 08:47AM

  Re: Why CJ Anderson is a better fit for the Rams O right now than Todd Gurley...

cool_hand_luke197February 01, 2019 03:14PM

  Re: Why CJ Anderson is a better fit for the Rams O right now than Todd Gurley...

Ohiorams280February 01, 2019 03:16PM

  Hmmmm Offensive player of the year 2018

ferragamo79222February 01, 2019 03:33PM

  Re: Hmmmm Offensive player of the year 2018

RamsFanSinceLA283February 01, 2019 03:37PM

  Re: Hmmmm Offensive player of the year 2018

Speed_Kills162February 01, 2019 04:25PM

  Re yes

Speed_Kills156February 01, 2019 04:20PM

  Benoit? Come on, that guy?

max191February 01, 2019 03:52PM

  Re: Why CJ Anderson is a better fit for the Rams O right now than Todd Gurley...

Speed_Kills174February 01, 2019 05:25PM

  come on guys, don’t you know this guy?

max339February 02, 2019 03:25AM

  Re: come on guys, don’t you know this guy?

21Dog170February 02, 2019 04:58AM

  Thunder and Lightning...

LMU93171February 02, 2019 04:40AM

  Re: Yeah the Patriots do that

Speed_Kills168February 02, 2019 04:58AM

  I've been watching Pats vid this am. I see no reason the Rams can't run it.

Saguaro257February 02, 2019 05:45AM

  I'll be honest here...

jemach190February 02, 2019 07:29AM