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As for the Arizona defense, Jackson is all too familiar with it. He was pretty much held in check in a season-opening 17-14 victory in St. Louis, getting 81 yards on 22 carries.
"I can name the whole defense, I know them like the back of my hand," Jackson said. "I'm pretty sure they're going to focus on the running game, put a lot of pressure on Sam, try to confuse him in coverages. If he continues to be poised and as sharp as he has been, I think we'll be fine."
Bradford's first career 300-yard passing day last week might loosen things up. He threw three touchdown passes and produced a season-best 431 total yards as the Rams ended a seven-game road losing streak with a 36-33 victory at Denver.
"Hopefully, if anything, it will open up some lanes for Jack," Bradford said. "I think the past couple weeks, we've seen nothing but eight-man boxes.
"I understand why defenses do it, but hopefully they'll start to respect the pass a little bit more."
Jackson will believe it when he sees fewer bodies jammed near the line waiting for him.
Of course, it's not all that bad. With five games to go Jackson is 117 yards shy of a sixth consecutive 1,000-yard season, which would extend his franchise record.
He's relatively healthy, too, if you discount the broken finger on his left ring finger that has forced him to play one-handed for several weeks. It's a lot better than last season, when he played the final third of the season with a ruptured disk in his back that required offseason surgery.
"This is the freshest that I've felt in a long time," Jackson said.
[Associated Press;
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