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Eric Weddle unretiring to play for Rams.

This thread holds the record for the most "this didn't age well" posts!
For good reason. Signing a safety who wasn't good enough 2 years ago to get us through the playoffs was a crazy move.

The fact it has worked out is almost crazier. But I give Weddle, the rest of the secondary, the pass rush, and the coaching staff to include Morris who sounded like the ring leader on this plenty of credit. It's miraculous how well he and Scott have paired.

River's Pre-Senior Bowl Mock Draft ...

Where are you getting the other third round pick and the fourth round pick? The Von Miller trade took that third, and Brandin Cooks took the fourth. Also, we have an extra seventh from the Aqib Talib trade.

Also, I'd personally draft more than one offensive lineman. I would not be comfortable riding into the season with Evans and Shelton (unless you do sign one of Allen or Corbett, and even then, I simply don't feel comfortable with Evans at all). Given that Whitworth/Noteboom are our choices for left tackle, I'd probably draft a developmental left tackle as well. I agree with safety, offensive line, running back, cornerback, and tight end as our needs. I don't think inside linebacker is an enormous need; I'd probably draft one in the seventh at most.

Allie Green IV could definitely be had lower. I haven't really spent much time studying prospects as I normally have, given the Super Bowl and lack of draft picks.

Yeah, the reason I asked you about Green is because I have also not been watching as much college football as in the past, too keyed up on the Rams this season.
As for my draft picks, I prefaced my post with Snead acquiring a few extra picks by way of trades and or combining picks to move up. It's inexact, but I don't see Snead sitting on what we currently have available and the Comp picks.
As I've stated in previous posts, trading Robert Woods, Henderson, Rapp & Hekker would be within consideration for movement.
I'm sure to post another mock following the Senior Bowl, and it's likely to look very different.
I too would like to draft more offensive linemen, although for this mock I'll have to rely more on UDFA's due to our lack of overall picks. My OG pick is actually an OT who I have moving to OG in the Bigs, but for the most part I feel fairly comfortable going into 2022 with Noteboom, Havenstein, Alaric Jackson, Edwards, Pircher & Brewer at OT. OG is very weak depth-wise imo, and Center is just as bad, so I'll be making adjustments to improve that soon.
The other positions I've drafted at besides OG here, are S, CB, ILB, RB & TE, all areas of developmental need imo.

Donation to Matt Staffords charity

I've seen this around a few places and thought I'd put it down here. There's a drive right now to get people to donate $9 to his charity of choice which happens to be ANA the Acoustic Neuroma Association. This is the charity his my cause my cleats effort went to as a way to honor what his wife went through a few years ago. I'm in no way trying to pressure people to do this it's always just nice to see what fans can do in these situations. If you can great and cool if not no worries at all.

Los Angeles Rams' Kevin Demoff says team has work to do in Los Angeles market


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    Brady HendersonESPN

Los Angeles Rams chief operating officer Kevin Demoff believes the team can eventually become as popular in the L.A. market as the Dodgers and Lakers, but he stressed that it won't happen overnight.

Even if the Rams win Super Bowl LVI in their home stadium.

"I absolutely believe that we can be at the level the Dodgers and Lakers have been and continue to be," Demoff said during an hourlong Zoom session with reporters on Wednesday. "But those teams have [had] decades of success and championships and building a fan base and building a deep, multicultural fan base. Stars, legends, Hall of Famers and building on consistency. ... The next two weeks are important, but so is 2022, and so is 2023.


"You cannot get to be at the pinnacle of this market by having one great season. You get to the pinnacle of this market by having great season after great season after great decade after great decade -- and building fans and generations of fans with that. That only comes with sustained success and sustained investment in the market, in the community, in schools. Building relationships. That's not overnight.

Demoff said the Rams are "scratching the surface of what they can become" in terms of popularity, which he believes can rise to the level of one of the world's 10 biggest sports brands. He noted that they're still in the infancy of their current iteration.

The team spent nearly five decades in Los Angeles, before relocating to St. Louis in 1994 then returning to L.A. in 2016. This marks the Rams' fourth trip to the playoffs and their second Super Bowl appearance in the six seasons since they've been back in L.A., where team owner Stan Kroenke built $5 billion SoFi Stadium in neighboring Inglewood.

The Rams will be only the second team to play in a Super Bowl at their home stadium -- joining last year's Tampa Bay Buccaneers -- when they face the Cincinnati Bengals on Feb. 13.

"I think it's an unprecedented opportunity for the Los Angeles Rams," Demoff said. "When you get a chance to play in the Super Bowl, that always helps win fans' hearts and minds. When you get a chance to host a Super Bowl, that obviously helps elevate your brand, the SoFi Stadium brand, the NFL in Los Angeles as a whole. When you combine those two, it's an unbelievably powerful mix to develop that next generation of fandom."

Demoff cited the local television ratings for last week's NFC Championship Game against the San Francisco 49ers as a testament to the Rams' growth in the L.A. market.

"Close to 2 million Angelenos were watching the game," he said, calling that an "amazing" number. "That still means that 18 million Angelenos weren't. So I think that's the challenge of the organization: How do you continue to make those inroads?"

While the TV ratings for last week's game were strong, 49ers fans appeared to at least match -- if not outnumber -- Rams fans at SoFi Stadium. That also was the case when the two teams met there in Week 18.


"Those 10 regular-season and postseason games, we had eight amazing buildings," Demoff said. "That atmosphere against the Arizona Cardinals for our wild-card game on Monday night was one of the best true Los Angeles sports atmospheres I've been in. But all you have to do, if we're being really honest, is look at Week 18 and look at the NFC Championship Game and say we have work to do. Too many 49ers fans in that building. And is that a reflection upon decades of being gone in Los Angeles and kids growing up rooting for different teams, the 49ers' success? Absolutely. It's a great credit to the 49ers.

"It's also a reminder to every person in our organization of the work we have to do. Until that building is 100% Rams fans for every game, until it looks like the wild card for every game, we're going to have work to do."

NFL Team Name Origin

https://www.oldest.org/sports/nfl-teams/

10. Cleveland Browns​

Year Established: June 4, 1944 (74 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1950
Previous Name(s): Cleveland Browns (1946 – 1995), (1999 – Present); team suspended operations between 1996 – 1998
Home Field: FirstEnergy Stadium in Cleveland, Ohio
Current Owner(s): Jimmy and Dee Haslam
Current Colors: Brown, Orange, and White

The Cleveland Browns were formed in 1944 by local businessman Arthur B. McBride after he acquired a franchise in the new All-America Football Conference (AAFC) that would start playing games in 1946. The first thing that McBride did was hire Paul Brown, who was a successful high school, college, and military coach. Brown was appointed as the team’s coach and general manager and also named the team as well.

The Browns dominated the AAFC until it was shuttered in 1949 and the team joined the NFL the following year, along with two other AAFC teams, the San Francisco 49ers and the original Baltimore Colts (not the same franchise as the later Baltimore Colts, which are now the Indianapolis Colts). After moving to the NFL, the Browns continued their dominance and went on to win the NFL Eastern Conference championship for six straight years from 1950 to 1955 and NFL titles in 1950, 1954 and 1955. Although the Cleveland Browns were a strong team in the beginning, the team has not done well at all in the past few decades – the team even had to suspend operations for a few years between 1996 – 1998.

9. Los Angeles Rams​

Year Established: 1936 (83 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1937
Previous Name(s): Cleveland Rams (1936 – 1942), (1944 – 1945); Los Angeles Rams (1946 – 1994), (2016 – Present); and St. Louis Rams (1995 – 2015)
Home Field: Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California
Current Owner(s): Stan Kroenke
Current Colors: Millennium Blue, White, and New Century Gold

The Los Angeles Rams returned to Los Angeles – the team moved from the city after the 1994 season – after spending 20 years in St. Louis. While the team is closely associated with these two cities, the Rams franchise was actually born in Cleveland in 1936 and joined the NFL the following year. For the first six years of the franchise’s history, the Rams were a terrible team and were disbanded for a year (1943 season) following a shortage of manpower due to World War II.

The Rams played their last game, a championship which they won, in Cleveland in 1945 and were moved to Los Angeles for the next season. After moving to L.A., new owner Dan Reeves signed Kenny Washington and Woody Strode, the first two African-American athletes with an NFL contract since 1932. Reeves was also the first owner in the NFL to hire a full-time scouting staff.

8. Philadelphia Eagles​

Year Established: July 8, 1933 (85 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1933
Previous Name(s): Philadelphia Eagles (1933 – 1942), (1944 – Present); and Phil-Pitt Steagles (1943)
Home Field: Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Current Owner(s): Jeffrey Lurie
Current Colors: Midnight Green, Silver, Black, and White

The Philadelphia Eagles have been part of Philadelphia sports history since 1933 when a syndicate headed by the late Bert Bell and Lud Wray purchased the former Frankford Yellowjackets franchise for $2,500. Although the Yellowjackets had won the NFL championship in 1926, the franchise went broke midway through the 1931 season and immediately stopped playing. Bell and Wray revived the franchise and named it the Philadelphia Eagles.

In 1943, the Philadelphia Eagles and the Pittsburgh Steelers were combined for one season because of the lack of men left at home during World War II. During the first decade, the Philadelphia Eagles were an okay team before finding success in the mid-1940s. Since then, the Philadelphia Eagles have had many highs and lows, including winning their first Super Bowl in 2017.

7. Pittsburgh Steelers​

Year Established: July 8, 1933 (85 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1933
Previous Name(s): Pittsburgh Pirates (1933 – 1939); Pittsburgh Steelers (1940 – 1942), (1945 – Present); Phil-Pitt Steagles (1943); and Card-Pitt (1944)
Home Field: Heinz Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Current Owner(s): The Rooney Family
Current Colors: Black and Gold

The Pittsburgh Steelers were founded in 1933 by Arthur J. Rooney and the team remains under ownership of the Rooney family today. While the team has always been in Pittsburgh, it was not always called the Steelers and was initially the Pittsburgh Pirates (like the baseball team).

For the first 40 years of the franchise’s history, the Steelers were an unremarkable team and never won a championship of any kind. Then in the 1970s, the Steelers hit their stride and had one of the greatest winning streaks in NFL history. During the 1970s, the Pittsburgh Steelers earned eight consecutive playoff berths, seven AFC Central titles and four AFC championships. The Steelers went on to become the first team in the NFL to win four Super Bowls and is the only team to win the Super Bowl twice in a row.

6. Washington Redskins​

Year Established: July 9, 1932 (86 years)
First Season in NFL: 1932
Previous Name(s): Boston Braves (1932); Boston Redskins (1933 – 1936); and Washington Redskins (1937 – Present)
Home Field: FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland
Current Owner(s): Daniel Snyder
Current Colors: Burgundy and Gold

The Washington Redskins were established as the Boston Braves in 1932 when George Preston Marshall was awarded the inactive Boston NFL franchise. Marshall named the team Braves after the name of the field the team used, Braves Field, which was the home of the National League baseball team. The team was moved to Fenway Park in 1933 and the its name was changed to the Redskins.

Marshall was often unhappy with the lack of fan support for the Redskins in Boston and ended up moving the team to Washington, D.C. in 1937, where the Redskins remain to this day. That same year, Marshall created a fight song and official marching band for the Redskins, the first to do so in the NFL. The Redskins have won a few Super Bowls and NFL Championships, but have not won a major championship since the early 1990s.

5. Detroit Lions​

Year Established: 1929 (90 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1930
Previous Name(s): Portsmouth Spartans (1930 – 1933); and Detroit Lions (1934 – Present)
Home Field: Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan
Current Owner(s): Martha Firestone Ford
Current Colors: Honolulu Blue and Silver

Detroit Lions were formed in 1934 when Detroit radio executive George A. Richards purchased the Portsmouth, Ohio, Spartans for $8,000, which was an unheard of amount of money at the time. The Spartans were initially formed in 1929 and had joined the NFL the following year. Two years later, the Spartans played in one of the most important games in NFL history, a championship game against the Chicago Bears. After that game came three major rule changes and the NFL was separated into two divisions and a championship game was played annually.

Prior to the purchase of the Spartans, there had been several attempts to establish a professional team in Detroit. Unlike those previous teams, the newly formed Lions, had some of the best players of the time and was led by Dutch Clark, an early football superstar and the NFL’s last dropkicker. The Detroit Lions had their best seasons in the 1950s and have been trying to recapture that greatness ever since.

Did You Know?
The Detroit Lions have never won a Super Bowl and last won a championship game in 1957.

4. New York Giants​

Year Established: August 1, 1925 (93 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1925
Previous Name(s): New York Giants (1925 – Present)
Home Field: MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey
Current Owner(s): John Mara and Steve Tisch
Current Colors: Dark Blue, Red, and White

The New York Giants are one of the few NFL teams that has remained in the same city since it was founded. The Giants team was founded in 1925 by Tim Mara, who purchased an NFL franchise in New York for $500. By the end of that first season, Mara had invested another $25,000 just to keep the team alive and ensure that New York would continue to have professional team.

From the start, the New York Giants were a popular team and more than 70,000 people had come out to watch the team play during its first season. The Giants were also a strong and skilled team from the beginning and won their first NFL Championship in 1927, their third season. Members of the Mara family still own the New York Giants today, along with Tisch family, who purchased 50 percent of the team in 1991.

3. Green Bay Packers​

Year Established: August 11, 1919 (99 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1921
Previous Name(s): Green Bay Packers (1919 – Present)
Home Field: Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin
Current Owner(s): Green Bay Packers, Inc. (governed by a Board of Directors)
Current Colors: Dark Green, Gold, and White

While the Green Bay Packers did not join the NFL until its second year, the team does have the distinction of being the oldest continuous franchise that has never moved or changed its name. From its inception in 1919, the Packers, who were sponsored by the Indian Packing Company, have been based out of Green Bay, Wisconsin.

The Green Bay Packers were founded by Earl Curly Lambeau and George Whitney Calhoun. Lambeau was a former football player and became the Packers’ first coach. The Green Bay Packers’ home field is named in honor of Lambeau. In addition to Lambeau, coach Vince Lombardi is the other dominant figure in the Packers’ history. Between the two coaches, the Green Bay Packers won 11 NFL Championships (pre-Super Bowl).

2. Chicago Bears​

Year Established: September 17, 1920 (98 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1920
Previous Name(s): Decatur Staleys (1920); Chicago Staleys (1921); and Chicago Bears (1922 – Present)
Home Field: Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois
Current Owner(s): Virginia Halas McCaskey
Current Colors: Navy Blue, Burnt Orange, and White

Besides the Arizona Cardinals, the Chicago Bears are the only current franchise that has been around since the first year of the NFL in 1920. The Bears started out in Decatur, Illinois as the Staleys and were moved to Chicago the following year. The team changed its name to the Chicago Bears in 1922 and has never moved cities or changed its name since then.

The Bears were initially sponsored by the Staley Starch Company, who decided to give team to legendary coach George Halas, for $5,000. The Staley Starch Company also allowed Halas to move the team to Chicago if he promised to keep the Staleys name for one more year. From the start, the Chicago Bears have been one of the most popular and successful franchises in the NFL. Today, the Chicago Bears are still owned by members of the Halas family.

1. Arizona Cardinals​

Year Established: 1898 (121 years ago)
First Season in NFL: 1920
Previous Name(s): Chicago Cardinals (1920 – 1943), (1945 – 1959); Card-Pitt (1944); St. Louis Cardinals (1960 – 1987); Phoenix Cardinals (1988 – 1993); and Arizona Cardinals (1994 – Present)
Home Field: State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona
Current Owner(s): Bill Bidwill
Current Colors: Cardinal Red, Black, and White

The Arizona Cardinals are the oldest team in the NFL and along with the Chicago Bears, is one of only two teams that were part of the inaugural NFL roster. While the franchise has been based out of Arizona since 1988, the Cardinals trace their history all the way back to 1898, decades before the NFL was founded. The team was initially called the Morgan Athletic Club and a few years later when the team bought used jerseys from the University of Chicago, team founder Chris O’Brien called the faded color “Cardinal red.”


The Bidwill family, which still owns the Cardinals today, first acquired the team in 1932. Under Charles W. Bidwill’s ownership, the Cardinals remained in operation during the Great Depression and World War II. After the end of the war, Bidwill had finally put together a winning team that went on to snag the Super Bowl title in 1947. Since joining the NFL in 1920, the Cardinals have called three different cities home, Chicago, St. Louis, and Phoenix.

Game balls from today? We shall give out 3.

Mine are.....

Kuppbeast.. What a game he had. Wow

Mr. Scott.. Wow what a clean hit that was. It came at a great time. The Whiners were playing dirty/chippy. He sent a message I feel.

Blanton... What a game this kid had.. Maybe not as good as Higbee, but he stepped it up. God bless.

What a game my fellow Rams fans.. Wow..

Those would be my three as well Dag.

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