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Owners approve 3rd Emergency QB

Yeah he is the coach who went through 5 QB’s in one season and a playoff game. He’s also the coach that decided to waive a QB in January just before the playoffs to add a player at another position. Lynch and Shanahan get a lot of credit for some of the choices they have made. They both deserve some scrutiny for the decision to only have 2QB’s on the roster for the playoffs and of course the bungled 3 number 1 picks for Trey Lance. Niners win despite them in many cases.
It was poor planning on their part.

Jim Brown has passed away at 87

Your circumstance is probably massively different than all the college football players who do not graduate (and there are a ton of them)
was just sayin, it can happen, and no matter what, Bennett and all others have just four years of NCAA eligibility, so I'm not sure what the whole deal is about.

Bennett was a walk on, no FB scholarship to depend on.
train

Any of you have a pilot's License?

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So took my Discovery flight on Saturday.
My instructor was a 23 year old and he said he started when he was 18! Lol He stated he was going to call me Friday to cancel for the weather outlook and glad he didn’t, it was majestic with the clouds rolling over the mountains and the sun coming up with all the 4-5 colors and rolling rain storms.

The plane for the day was a Cessna 172 and it was pretty little being up close to it, a lot more than I would have imagined!

As soon as I got up to the plane my adrenaline started kicking in and didn't stop until about 5 hours after my hour and a half flight. We did steep decent and ascent, slight to very tight turns left and right, flying on a pattern, and of course learning gauges and settings the trim wheel to have a relaxing flight, it was pretty damn cool.

Now to see about this 75-80k to get a commercial twin engine instrument rating! :woozy2:

No More Additions

For right now, I agree. We're not winning the Super Bowl this year, that's the reality.

If by midseason a miracle happens and we're looking like a serious contender then sure trade and sign whoever you have to to go all the way like we did in 2021.

But if not, let's let the new prospects get all the reps they can, I actually really liked the draft we just had.

Rams Draft - QUANTITY OVER QUALITY?

I’m looking at that 5th round haul and I’m impressed and optimistic.

Hampton, Edge
McClendon, OL
Allen, TE
Nacua, WR

All four of these guys could be starting by their 2nd year—if not sooner. That would then certainly qualify as “quality” as well as quantity. We’re talking about the 5th freaking round here, folks.
You can easily see what success could look like with these guys.. but they're also 5th rounders.

Hampton looks like a ton of fun and I hope he can take the leap.

McClendon is a little bit of an enigma to me.

Allen needs to get stronger and it always takes TEs a bit to adapt to the NFL.

Nacua is interesting. Really moves a lot like Kupp did in college.

NFL puts wildcard game on Peacock network

I'm on the fence with Sunday Ticket. The allure is an entire season of Rams games in HD, without the hassle of clunky feeds or casting a low bitrate video onto my 4K TV screen. The downside is obviously the price, which I'm going to have to make up my mind about soon.

I like the perspective of paying $5 for a single game, although it seems a bit unfair to ask that of two NFL fanbases when the rest of the playoff teams get their game(s) for free.

Oh ESPN+, I used the magazine hack forever to get it for about $2/year. I miss being able to click on every article on ESPN.com without fear of a paywall. Nothing pisses me off more than a story without the + sign that actually requires the subscription. I want to know the top 5 young players on the Rams roster, damn it!
Yeah I think the irritating time of not having ESPN is before the draft. Draft is still their strength, at least in terms of what I'm tempted to click on of their content.

No "Rookie Minicamp" for Rams

I agree with @CGI_Ram that the article doesn't make things very clear. Are the Rams "giving up 3 days with rookies" or "just allocating their time with rookies differently"? Article doesn't make it clear one way or another. The headline conflicts with the body of the story.

Regardless, none of this is a big deal. Rams are a successful organization and they know what they're doing. Just wish the author of the article had explained more clearly what his point was in saying "Rams do it differently than the other 31 teams" and then not spelling out exactly what he means by that.
There's a segment of the media that gets off on acting like the Rams don't know what they're doing... or just add drama for no reason

Our formula has been the same for years now... and it's been successful...

Linebacker Depth Chart

He's back! The Rams are re-signing Hudson and Woodbey :laugh2:

I think Woodbey is worth playing the long game on
.. We've used that "redshirt" year with some success with some other guys

Perceptions and ignoring Yogi Berra

As Sean Mullin’s admiring documentary “It Ain’t Over” makes clear, Yogi Berra wasn’t built like a Baseball Hall of Famer. The longtime New York Yankees catcher, who died in September 2015 at age 90, stood at 5-foot-7, never exactly sculpted his squat physique and would have been the first to admit he didn’t have magazine-cover looks.

But Berra’s accomplishments belied his unassuming image: 10 World Series titles, three MVP awards and 18 all-star selections during a playing career that spanned 1946 to 1965. So it’s fitting that “Over,” at a compact 98 minutes, proves to be such a comprehensive encapsulation of an American icon known more for his ubiquitous turns of phrase — “It ain’t over till it’s over” chief among them — than for his exploits on the diamond.

Mullin’s documentary seeks, first and foremost, to correct that perception. “[Mickey] Mantle was Elvis in pinstripes, and Yogi was Sancho Panza,” says Billy Crystal, Berra’s longtime friend and an incisive source of on-screen insight. “I think it’s quite evident that his personality overshadowed his talent as a ballplayer.” Mullin comes out swinging at that distortion. As “It Ain’t Over” opens with a ceremony from the 2015 All-Star Game that recognized Hank Aaron, Johnny Bench, Sandy Koufax and Willie Mays as baseball’s four greatest living legends, the film cuts to Berra’s incredulous granddaughter wondering why her grandfather got short shrift.



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Related video: Big names turn out for premiere of Yogi Berra documentary at Lincoln Center (News 12)
Series champion Yogi Berra and that film premiering tonight at
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The ensuing scroll through Berra’s life story efficiently but affectionately hits its biographical beats. Wielding a trove of vintage photographs and archival footage, “It Ain’t Over” paints a colorful portrait of a working-class player with no shortage of wit, pluck and self-deprecation. Musings on Berra’s humble upbringing, as a second-generation Italian immigrant from St. Louis, and his experience storming the beaches of Normandy quickly ground the larger-than-life figure. The sweetly sentimental tale of how Berra wooed his wife, Carmen, further fleshes out a man often flattened into a caricature, as do reflections on their 65-year marriage.

But it’s the movie’s position on Berra the ballplayer that justifies the entire enterprise. Crisp graphics convincingly make the case that Berra remains underappreciated. A fawning collection of talking heads — such as sportswriters Bob Costas and Claire Smith, retired all-stars Derek Jeter and Nick Swisher, and managerial greats Joe Torre and Joe Maddon — intricately deconstruct Berra’s knack for making contact at the plate and calling a pristine game behind it. His role in catching the only perfect game in World Series history, from Don Larsen in 1956, gets its due in transfixing detail. And Berra’s lifelong insistence that he tagged out Jackie Robinson when the Brooklyn Dodgers star stole home in the 1955 World Series makes for a charming recurring gag.

“It Ain’t Over” also doesn’t shy away from the less glamorous phases of Berra’s life. His tumultuous coaching career gets as much time as his decorated playing days. Berra’s son Dale bravely opens up about his own cocaine addiction and the tough love his father administered to help him get sober. For all of the Berra family’s consternation over Yogi’s cartoonish public image, there’s still fun to be had as those closest to him — and, in amusing archival interviews, Berra himself — struggle to decipher his Yogi-isms. (For the uninitiated, he also coined the phrases, “It’s deja vu all over again,” “If you can’t imitate him, don’t copy him,” and “When you come to a fork in the road, take it.”)

A clever framing device places Berra’s sayings alongside comparable pearls of wisdom from the likes of William Shakespeare, Plato and Albert Einstein. Berra’s advice, of course, tends to be dizzyingly contradictory but deceptively simple. The same could be said of “It Ain’t Over,” which zips through Berra’s life without ever feeling rushed. When it comes to Mullin’s well-paced depiction of a misunderstood legend, Berra’s words put it best: “You can observe a lot by watching.”

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Johnny Bench has long been considered the best catcher ever. Take a look at his career numbers and Berra's.
Bench >>>> https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/benchjo01.shtml
Berra >>>> https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/berrayo01.shtml

They're almost identical. And where there's a disparity, Berra has the better numbers.

Avg. Berra .285 / Bench .267
OB% Berra .348/ Bench .342
OPS Berra .830 / Bench .817
HR Berra 358 / Bench 389
RBI Berra 1430 / Bench 1376
Runs Berra 1175 / Bench 1091
Walks Berra 704 / Bench 891
MVP Berra 3 / Bench 2
Runner up Berra 2 / Bench 0
World Series Berra 14 / Bench 4
Champions Berra 10 / Bench 2

Don't tell me Johnny Bench was better defensively. Looking at the two, Berra is the clear leader but perception is Bench was the greatest catcher. Pahleese!!!!

Los Angeles Rams way-too-early 53-man roster prediction

Lol. Whatever man. Doesnt even change the point.
And I looked it up and am correct on Whitworth.
Sportrac disagrees with OTC as well.

**EDIT**
“Once a player reaches the void years portion of their contract and they are not re-signed to a new contract for that team, all the bonus money prorated onto the void years is accelerated to that year for cap purposes.”

You got me there. I read overthecap.com wrong. The lower number on later years are if said player is cut the prior season.

That said, 2023 $3.9 million cap savings is hardly minimal for a team tight up against the cap with few ways to obtain more cap space. Again, they've got to sign draft choices AND have enough to make it through the season.

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