I don't know if Sean can change in any meaningful way. He will never become a smashmouth football guy. He is wedded to the whiz bang passing offense and defending against similar offenses. The NFL goes through cycles when teams get unbalanced toward quick tempo passing offenses, and then the bully boy teams come in and smack them in the mouth, like what happens every time we play the Shanny 49ers.
Losing to them six times straight is almost more than I can bear...
I don't think we were doomed to defeat because SF, even without Trent Williams, plays great smash mouth football. And not because our D wasn't able to get enough stops on their runs, short passes and long TD drives. We still made some key plays. (I also thought the refs gave SF a lot of breaks on what should have been holding and personal foul calls.)
We still should have won. We lost the game because of our own mistakes.
Our first half until the last drive was exemplary. McVay was playing run first, control the ball football and Stafford converted third downs. Result: We put up points, dominated time of possession, and had the Niners on their heels.
We allowed SF back in the game emotionally as a result of McVay's inexplicable decision to throw from an empty backfield on third and a foot at the end of the half. McVay made a key error here and and a similar, though opposite, play calling error when he ran the ball on third and 7 at the end of regulation.
Rams needed to call high percentage plays in each case to maintain ball control and hopefully score but failed to do so. (Don't tell me we don't have a better play to run for half a yard or to throw for a seven yard third down. The Niners in fact have those plays). The result was giving up possession, points, and ultimately the game. McVay needs more discipline and maybe more mental preparation for play calls in critical situations like these.
Stafford played really well much of the game. Made some great, tough throws. But his interceptions gave away first possession and then a chance to win the game. It's not too much to ask of a 13 year veteran to make better decisions and not put the ball up for grabs.
Last were the coverage breakdowns in the game tying TD drive by SF. First Ramsay, then apparently Rapp, blew coverages. (Or so it appeared to me--can't be certain without knowing the intended coverage.) In any event the scheme broke down at a critical point.
Rams played well enough to win. We had our chances to put the game away but gave it away instead.