Sports
The Matthew Stafford effect: From Calvin Johnson to Puka Nacua, QB makes receivers great
It’s no coincidence.
In 2012, Calvin Johnson of the Detroit Lions established an NFL record for yards receiving in a season.
It’s not unexplainable luck.
In 2021, Cooper Kupp of the Rams achieved the so-called triple crown of receiving by leading the NFL in catches, yards receiving and touchdown catches.
It’s becoming a trend.
This season Rams receiver Puka Nacua established NFL rookie records for catches and yards receiving.
“It starts with a common denominator — all those things,” Kupp said. “And it’s Matthew Stafford.”
Stafford, the Rams’ veteran quarterback, is one of the most prolific passers in NFL history. The 15th-year pro ranks 11th in passing yardage (56,047) and touchdowns (357), according to profootballreference.com
Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford celebrates his touchdown pass to Cooper Kupp (left) in 2021, the year the receiver won the “Triple Crown” of pass catchers.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)
Stafford, 35, played 12 seasons for Detroit Lions before he was traded to the Rams in 2021. In his first season with coach Sean McVay, he led the Rams to a Super Bowl title. After an injury-plagued 2022, he has led them back to the playoffs.
On Sunday the Rams will play the Lions in an NFC wild-card game at Ford Field, Detroit’s first home playoff game in 30 years.
It is a homecoming for a quarterback who had the major hand in historic seasons for Johnson, Kupp and Nacua.
“It’s not a coincidence,” McVay said. “Those guys are all great receivers … and they earned the credit that’s come their way. But I don’t think that that’s occurring with just anybody, and that’s one of the things that makes Matthew special.
“The best elevate people around them.”
That is what Hall of Fame quarterback Kurt Warner did when he starred for the St. Louis Rams. Warner directed “The Greatest Show on Turf” offense that helped the Rams play in two Super Bowls, winning one.
Great players cannot maximize their talent without other great players around them, said Warner, a two-time NFL most valuable player.
Stafford and the record-setting receivers mutually benefited from each other.
“When you do things that are historical, that’s not just, ‘Oh well, one guy was really good and anybody could have done it,’ ” said Warner, an NFL Network analyst. “It took two, and Matthew being as good as he is, and those guys being as good as they are, put them together and that’s where we see the greatness that they’ve been able to accomplish.”
Johnson, Kupp and Nacua are “different players, different people, three different kinds of receivers,” Stafford told The Times in October after Nacua got off to an historic start.
“I just feel lucky to play with guys that talented that can get open and make plays,” Stafford said. “Just fun to be part of those seasons with those guys because they don’t happen all the time. They’re tough to accomplish.
“It takes a lot of dedication, takes some good fortune and a lot of other things. Just humbled to be a part of it.”
Zac Robinson, the Rams’ quarterbacks coach, is not surprised by Stafford’s role in historic performances. Robinson first saw Stafford up close during the 2008 Manning Camp, an annual quarterbacks confab organized by Peyton and Eli Manning. Robinson was going into his junior year at Oklahoma State, Stafford his junior season at Georgia.
Zac Robinson, left, now the Rams quarterbacks coach, was astounded when he first saw Matthew Stafford throwing the football.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
“As soon as I saw him throw live, I’m like, ‘That just looks different than anybody I’ve ever seen throw a football,’ ” Robinson said.
In 2010, 17 months after the Lions selected Stafford with the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft, the Lions claimed Robinson off waivers. Stafford had suffered a shoulder injury, but his growth as a quarterback astounded Robinson.
“He was in Year 2,” Robinson said, “but the amount of knowledge he had about the offense and knowing every single person’s job, I was like, man, this guy not only is super talented, but I had no idea how bright he was. He had total mastery of the system.”
Stafford was primed for a big season in 2012. The season before he passed for 5,038 yards and 41 touchdowns with 16 interceptions.
Johnson, at 6 feet 5 and 237 pounds, proved a perfect target and perfectly suited for the nickname “Megatron.”
The Lions’ Calvin Johnson (81) is congratulated by Matthew Stafford after breaking Jerry Rice’s single-season record for yards receiving.
(Duane Burleson / Associated Press)
“Calvin was extremely dedicated — one of the hardest-working guys on our team and unselfish,” Stafford said of the Hall of Fame receiver. “And, obviously, he had all the physical tools that were probably second to none of anybody that’s ever played the position.”
Attempts to reach Johnson for this story were unsuccessful, but Stafford has vivid memories of the Week 15 game against the Atlanta Falcons when Johnson broke Jerry Rice’s record of 1,848 yards receiving. After a 26-yard gain, the game was paused for an on-field celebration and video tribute from Rice.
Kupp was a redshirt freshman at Eastern Washington at the time.
“I watched Calvin for entertainment because I couldn’t do any of that,” Kupp said. “I remember getting to near the end of that, where every week you’re checking like, ‘Is he on pace? Can he get there?’
“It was like a kid waking up in the morning to see cartoons. You wanted to check what Calvin had, and what he went for.”
Johnson finished the season with 1,964 yards. He and Stafford played together through 2015, then Johnson, worn down by injuries and frustrated by the Lions’ losing, shocked the football world by retiring at 30.
After the 2020 season, Stafford was ready for change. An organization rebuild was starting. He met with the Lions and they agreed to seek a trade.
“I was dedicated to the city of Detroit, the people of Detroit, the fans, the team, everybody,” Stafford said. “I wanted to bring a winner there really bad. And we had our chances a few times and weren’t able to get it done and it was tough. … I didn’t know how much more football I had left and figured it was probably best for both sides.”
The Rams jumped at the chance to send quarterback Jared Goff, two first-round picks and a third-round pick to Detroit for Stafford.
“I felt a huge weight of responsibility, not only for the guys in the locker room, but the team stuck their neck out to come and get me and I wasn’t blind to that fact,” Stafford said. “So I wanted to make sure that I’d come in and do my job as well as I possibly could.”
Stafford teamed with Kupp during a historic season on multiple fronts. Kupp led the league with 145 catches, 1,947 yards and 16 touchdown catches, only the fourth player in history to achieve the feat.
The Rams won Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium — Stafford connecting with Kupp on a pivotal, no-look pass and two touchdowns, including the game-winner.
Rams receiver Cooper Kupp (10) catches a touchdown pass in front of Bengals cornerback Eli Apple (20) in Super Bowl LVI.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)
“It was just consistent,” Kupp said of his connection with Stafford throughout the season, “like ‘Hey, let’s just execute our job, do our job over and over again.’ And I think we did a good job of that.”
Said Stafford: “The coolest thing about that was being able to do that with all the team success we had. It was unbelievable to be able to get that done.”
Stafford’s experience, vision and ability to make throws from every conceivable angle — “He has every club in the bag,” offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur quipped — are among the characteristics that set him apart.
But Kupp said there is more.
Rams Cooper Kupp (10) and Matthew Stafford celebrate after their Super Bowl victory over the Bengals.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)
“Sometimes, he’ll say, ‘Hey, let’s go do something sweet,’ ” Kupp said. “He wants to get you open and hit you in stride so you can go do something cool with the ball.
“And there’s an attitude that he builds with people. It’s like, ‘I’m going to be back here moving in the pocket, ducking and diving and weaving and side-arming the thing, so when you catch the ball go do something with it.’
“And that’s a healthy challenge. Puka’s done that. Calvin certainly did that. It’s something I pride myself on as well. All the receivers he’s played with have been like, ‘[No.] 9’s back there doing some stuff. When you get the ball, he set the standard the first half of the play, you better bring it the second half.’”
Nacua, an unheralded fifth-round draft pick, indoctrinated himself from the moment he arrived for offseason workouts.
“He comes to work every day eager to learn,” Stafford said. “That’s the only way you have success this early, is having the right attitude toward, ‘Hey, I don’t know everything. Let me learn.’ ”
With Kupp sidelined the first four games because of a hamstring injury, Nacua started fast. Through four games, he had 39 catches for 501 yards, including a game-winning touchdown catch in overtime at Indianapolis.
The Rams’ Puka Nacua (right) celebrates his touchdown catch with a Matthew Stafford headbutt.
(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)
What Nacua was doing was unprecedented. What Stafford was doing was not.
“We always called him the most underrated player in the league when he was in Detroit,” Cincinnati Bengals coach Zac Taylor said, “because they weren’t necessarily going to the playoffs and he wasn’t getting all the accolades.
“But as quarterbacks, when we watched the tape, it was, ‘This guy is unbelievable.’ ”
Dallas Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy guided the Green Bay Packers for 13 seasons. He saw plenty of Stafford in twice-yearly NFC North matchups.
“He’s like a fine wine,” McCarthy said. “He’s only gotten better.”
In a Week 13 victory over the Cleveland Browns, Stafford called what Nacua described as a “sweet audible” for Nacua to run a route across the middle.
“I remember like, ‘Run as fast as you can to green grass because there’s no chance No. 9 is going to miss you,’ ” Nacua said. “I was like, ’Man, just trust it.’… He hit me dead smack in the center of the chest. I just cupped it right here and thought, ‘I’ve got so much momentum. I just got to keep it going.’ ”
Nacua dashed for a 70-yard touchdown. He finished the season with 105 catches for 1,486 yards, both NFL rookie records.
The question now is how many seasons, record-setting or otherwise, will Stafford play?
“As long as I’m still excited about putting in all the work that it takes to play at a high level and not just come out here and roll the ball out and see what happens,” Stafford said, “then I’ll keep playing. … As long as the hits don’t add up too crazy, then maybe I’ll keep going for a little bit.”
The Super Bowl title that Stafford won with the Rams has bolstered a résumé that could send Stafford to the Hall of Fame.
He does not think about it but said he sometimes is reminded by defensive players on opposing teams.
“They say, ‘Hey man, watched you growing up. You’re a Hall of Famer,’ ” Stafford said, laughing. “And I’m like … ’Thanks, I guess.’
“But I appreciate that.”
Sports
Chris Johnson’s former teammate reflects on ex-star’s surprise ALS diagnosis, tight-knit bond after milestone
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The NFL world was stunned on Monday when it became public that Chris Johnson, one of just nine players ever to rush for 2,000 yards in a season, is suffering from ALS.
The news hit close to home for Ryan Fitzpatrick, who played for Johnson’s Tennessee Titans for a season. And despite it being just one year, the two have a special connection.
“He was a great teammate when I got to play with him for the one year, and obviously a super talented guy on the football field. We texted about a year ago. I was just looking back at our text messages, and one of the things that I had sent him — the 100th touchdown pass that I threw in the NFL was to CJ2K, and he signed the football for me and gave it to me. It says, ‘To my cool white boy. Congrats on number 100,’” Fitzpatrick recalled in an interview with Fox News Digital. “So the amount of street credit I have from Chris Johnson calling me a cool white boy has always been awesome to me.”
Quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick, No. 4 of the Tennessee Titans, hands off to running back Chris Johnson, No. 28, against the Seattle Seahawks at CenturyLink Field on October 13, 2013 in Seattle, Washington. (Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images)
But ALS is just such a tough thing to have to deal with, obviously for Chris and for everybody around him. You can just imagine the frustrations of his mind being there but his body starting to fail him and how difficult that is. We’re obviously all hoping for the best for him, and all our love and support goes to him and his wife and his family.”
In a lengthy social media post, Johnson said that there is growing research that shows a link between repetitive head trauma and ALS, and studies have shown that NFL players are four times as likely to develop ALS as the general population.
Fitzpatrick, personally, said that when it comes to football, he would do it all over again, even as the risks are more prevalent now than ever before. However, what comes with age is more grim reality.
Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson runs against the Carolina Panthers at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C., on Aug. 28, 2010. (Sam Sharpe/USA TODAY Sports)
FORMER NFL STAR CHRIS JOHNSON SAYS HE’S BEEN DIAGNOSED WITH ALS
“I do think guys playing football understand at least the broad scope of what the risks are. I think a lot of guys would tell you, and I would be the same way, football has given me so much in my life that it’s something I would do again in a heartbeat. And for my kids that want to pursue it, I’m happy for them to pursue it,” Fitzpatrick said.
“But as you get older, I’m 43, as you get older, and your parents get older, I lost my mom five years ago, there’s just more stuff that seems to happen. It’s really sad. One of my best friends from high school was diagnosed with ALS. So seeing that firsthand, and the difficulties that come with it, not just for him but everybody that is around him, it’s really hard. As you get older, stuff happens, and there are things that you have to deal with and figure out. So unfortunately, it’s a tough part about aging.”
There is no known cure for ALS – known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. It’s a progressive disease in which the brain loses connection with the muscles, according to the ALS Association. The afflicted slowly lose their ability to walk, talk, eat, dress, write, swallow and, eventually, breathe.
Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson breaks free for a long run against the San Francisco 49ers in the fourth quarter at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Nov. 8, 2009. The Titans defeated the 49ers 34-27. (Cary Edmondson/USA TODAY Sports)
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The former running back played in the NFL from 2008 to 2017 with the Titans, New York Jets and Arizona Cardinals.
Fox News’ Ryan Gaydos and Angelica Stabile contributed to this report.
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Sports
Letters to Sports: Mixed emotions over LeBron James leaving Lakers
I will miss watching the greatest maestro and savant in the history of basketball, LeBron James. He is to basketball what Van Gogh was to painting, Coltrane to music, Hemingway to literature. He came from poverty and rose to a global hero and gave back. His after-game interviews were always intelligent and sometimes humorous. To all his detractors and haters? Eat your hearts out, he is a happy man.
Dell Franklin
Cayucos
I have always been in awe of LeBron’s athleticism and basketball IQ. And I greatly admire his dedication to maintaining his physical abilities throughout the years and his philanthropic pursuits.
But, as a lifelong Lakers fan, I will not miss LeBron. He was never a true Laker. He made it clear when he announced that he was taking his talents to South Beach that he cared only about LeBron, not the team.
So, as he closes out his career elsewhere, I will enjoy watching his superior playing prowess from afar. But I will be grateful that I can now cheer for my Lakers without the drama LeBron brings to every team he’s been on.
Linda Salzman
Rancho Palos Verdes
I agree that it was probably time to move on from LeBron simply in the interest to pursue a long-term player versus one more year from the King. But Bill Plaschke’s argument that he was tired of the mind games LeBron supposedly was playing is a terrible take. Losing 27-7-7 is not replaceable overnight, if ever.
George Metalsky
Redondo Beach
While acknowledging LeBron James as one of the greatest basketball players of all time, it never really felt as if he was selflessly committed to the Purple and Gold team concept like so many of the legendary players that preceded him.
During his eight years as a Laker there seemed to be countless occasions when Lakers brass capitulated to his “demands.” Year after year we endured a mishmash roster with his hand-picked players, just to appease LeBron.
During the Lakers’ dynasty we had championship teams. With LeBron we had a king shaping his fiefdom to first and foremost best serve him.
He’s a great player but a horrible GM. The Lakers will be a better team without him.
David Griffin
Westwood
I only have one question regarding LeBron James: What happens to Bronny now?
David Waldowski
Laguna Woods
Sports
Messi, Argentina avoid a shocking upset in wild knockout stage match against Cape Verde
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On Friday, Argentina looked to continue its quest for back-to-back World Cup titles, and to do it, they had to get through one of the darlings of this year’s tournament, Cape Verde.
The small island nation off the coast of West Africa came into the match as the No. 64-ranked team in the world, and they managed to hold Argentina — the No. 2 team behind France at the moment — scoreless for almost thirty minutes.
But in the 29th minute, Lionel Messi scored to give Argentina the lead.
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That was the 20th World Cup goal of his career, and it also made him the first player to score seven or more goals in multiple World Cups, having done it in Qatar as well.
It was also Messi’s eighth-straight World Cup match with a goal.
Argentina’s Lionel Messi scored in his eight-straight World Cup match and potted the 20th World Cup goal of his career. (Photo by Pablo Morano/BSR Agency/Getty Images))
Well, typically when Argentina takes the lead, they don’t cough it up, but early in the second half, Cape Verde’s Deroy Duarte pulled off a stunner and tied the game at 1-1.
HARRY KANE RESCUES ENGLAND FROM SHOCK WORLD CUP EXIT WITH TWO GOALS IN 11 MINUTES AGAINST DR CONGO
While there was some late pressure from Argentina, that included an always-dangerous Messi free kick from just outside the box that Cape Verde managed to stop.
And with that, it was off to extra time.
Cape Verde celebrates after scoring one of their two tying goals against Argentina. (Photo by Pablo Morano/BSR Agency/Getty Images)
However, it only took moments for Cape Verde to find themselves once again battling from behind.
Lisandro Martinez found the twine in the 92nd minute to give Argentina the lead.
It looked like that would be all she wrote… but Cape Verde had other plans.
They stuck with the defending World Cup champs, and in the 103rd minute, Sidny Lopes Cabral scored an unbelievable goal to tie the game again.
Coming into this game, Argentina had given up just two goals in their ten-match World Cup winning streak.
Cape Verde did that in one match.
Argentina’s Cristian Romero gets his head on what proved ot be the game-winning goal. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)
But in the 111th minute, Messi took an Argentina corner kick and put it in the perfect spot for Cristian Romero to head it to the back post and into the back of the net.
This was eventually updated to an own-goal, as it went off the Cape Verde defender’s arm, but it counts the same on the scoreboard.
Despite a late flurry of chances, Argentina held on to avoid what would have been potentially the biggest upset in World Cup history.
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What a match, and what a run Cape Verde had in the tournament.
Argentina will now have to recompose and get ready for a tough Round of 16 match against Egypt, which will take place on Tuesday in Atlanta.
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