I think you are confusing teams who build there offense for the run and teams that build their offense for the pass, but run the ball. The Rams pass the ball far more than they run, even though they are OK at running the ball. Their offensive line is primarily pass blockers, with the exception of Kyle Turly (aquired only this year). The 90s Cowboys were also a very good passing team.
When teams build their team to run at the expense of the pass they don't do as well.
When teams build their team to run at the expense of the pass they don't do as well.
I think you confusing teams that have balanced offenses for teams that build their offenses for the pass. The St. Louis Rams during their two Superbowl marches were balanced teams. For example, in their 1999 Superbowl run they were 16th in rushing attempts while 20th in passing attempts. In 2001 they were more pass oriented (Martz's influence), being 12th passing attempts and 22nd in rushing attempts. However, in 2001 they were also #1 in rushing YPA and rushing TDs. They were still a fairly balanced team if you look at the number of their attempts.
And btw, if you are looking at this years Rams, saying Orlando Pace isn't as good a run blocker as he is a pass blocker is just being blind.
'90s Cowboys being a passing team . That team was definetly BUILT for the run. The offense went through Emmitt.
Denver's two Superbowl years 1997-98, they were built through the run (look it up, in 1998 they were 2nd in rushing attempts and only 21st in passing attempts).
Baltimore has been built on the run. KC has been built through the run.
There are a LOT of successful teams that have built through the run that you wouldn't even consider so. And a running game is something that is needed in the playoffs. Not just to keep teams honest, but to use it to win games.
Successful teams that are dominant because of their passing usually have run up large leads by the middle of the third quarter and end up running the ball for the last quarter and a half to eat up the clock. Running against lines that already know they've lost. This can easily pad the rushing stats making the team appear to be a successful running team in comparison.
Some yards perhaps. But you have to have a good running back and o-line in order to do this. Teams know you are going to try to run out the clock, so they'll key for the run. No team that sucked at the run is consistantly able to run out the clock .
Though, as we have seen, it doesn't hurt to have a great defense. Yet even that is not always the case; i.e. the Niners this year, and The Charges through most of the 90s.
I don't think both teams are HURT by good defenses. I think without those D's they would suck even worse.
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