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Attention Dubstep Lovers: I made dubstep. Check it out!

I spin Drum n Bass and Jungle. Dubstep used to be cool when it first evolved from UK Garage. I don't like how skream/benga/skrillex made it evolve into the current sound now. Good job, though. What did you use? Do you ever dabble in DNB?

*sorry, not trying to be negative. Im very passionate about my dance music. Lol
Haha this thread is making a comeback I see...Well, I used Logic Pro X. The same thing I use to record podcasts. Funny story I started making a song one night after my computer went nuts and copied and pasted my transition sound in my podcast all over. That's what got me into it haha

The Big TV Series Thread

I watched the finale last night. It's one of those shows that builds as it goes. It's emphasis is on developing the characters of these doomed men instead of shocking surprises like the zombie shows use.

Breaking Bad was like that because it showed Walter White starting off as a mild mannered chemistry teacher who over time became a murderous drug kingpin. Shows like that take patience. At least The Terror was only one season.
What you should have said to me was, "Just watch the darn show you impatient numbskull!!!"
Holy cow, I knocked out 2 more episodes and the slow burn has erupted in to a full on bonfire!!
Anyone reading this far, please disregard my earlier comments, "The Terror" is a great show

Rams ILB Mark Barron recovering from undisclosed injuries, will return for training camp

This really is nothing new with Barron. We knew he had shoulder surgery and had other health issues last year. I questioned his healthy before the surgery which created a big debate. If the Rams feel he will be ready before the season it's hard to question that at this time. It's not time to panic or start the cut Barron posts.

I don't know why we don't get more injury details during the off season. Could be they simply like to keep things in house. Could be they don't want to tip their hand on pickups or trades. This Rams management group doesn't tip their hand in any event so I see a remote possibility that this is more serious and could be addressed appropriately. For right it's wait and see.

No one talks much about all the QB’s Mark Barron has put out of games. He plays hard.

Carson Wentz being one of them. Maybe he helped the Easley win a Super Bowl.

Owners To Eliminate Kickoffs?

How did they animate the brain?

Where do you get all your vast supply of knowledge, discernment, wisdom, and your seeming expertise of technical intellect?
In other words, I'm jealous. Oh could you please perform my brain surgery when it's required?
I'm also glad my brain doesn't slosh, because it sure feels like it has.o_O
When I first read this, I thought it was sarcasm. Then I saw his comment and realized I too, was jealous of the intellect shown lol

RIP Chuck Knox

Chuck Knox should be remembered for making James Harris the NFL’s first black starting QB
Back in the 1970s, the coach had to fight the L.A. Rams’ front office and some fans to get the ‘Shack’ in the game
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After Chuck Knox died on May 12, newspaper obituaries painted a completely inoffensive picture of the longtime NFL head coach, who led three different teams to the playoffs over 22 years.

The New York Times intoned Knox’s nickname of “Ground Chuck,” in reference to his devotion to the running game. In the Los Angeles Times, a former quarterback recalled the coach’s “John Wayne thing.”

The Seattle Times mentioned Ground Chuck as well, adding in a few anodyne “Knoxisms” such as “Play the hand you’re dealt” and “Football players make football plays.’’

The portrait of blue-collar grit fit neatly with the details of Knox’s biography. The son of a steelworker in a western Pennsylvania mill town, he played tackle at small Juniata College in his home state and started his coaching career there. When he made it to the pros, it was as the assistant in charge of the New York Jets’ offensive line.

Yet, what virtually every posthumous tribute to Knox overlooked or downplayed was his role as a history-making risk-taker. As head coach of the Los Angeles Rams in 1974, Knox named James “Shack” Harris starting quarterback — the first time an African-American player would consistently hold that position, which was the last in pro football to be desegregated. Without Knox’s daring, who knows how many more years would have passed before that color line was broken?

“He was a coach you could believe in,” Harris said in a phone interview several days after Knox’s death. “He was straight with you. He had a demeanor, a presence, that everyone respected. As a quarterback, he’d call you in face-to-face, tell you what he thought, what you’re gonna do. There were no secrets.”

As for Harris, Knox told Steve Wulf of ESPN in 2014: “He was the NFL’s first black regular quarterback, which didn’t mean a thing to me. However, he was the first quarterback that I developed, which did. I really liked James Harris. It was obvious he had the ability and had never gotten the chance.”

The chain of events that brought Harris and Knox together to make winning football and social change started in failure. In 1972, after three injury-marred seasons with the Buffalo Bills, Harris was waived and went to work for the U.S. Department of Commerce. But Harris’ college coach, the legendary Eddie Robinson of Grambling State University, appealed to another of his former stars, Paul “Tank” Younger, then a scout for the Los Angeles Rams. With a push from Younger, the Rams signed Harris to their practice squad.

After a lackluster 6-7-1 season, the Rams’ front office fired head coach Tommy Prothro and brought in Knox, then just 41 years old. As a favor to his successor, Prothro passed along a set of notes on each player’s capabilities, and what he wrote about Harris was sufficient for Knox to put Harris on the regular roster in 1973. Even so, he barely played as John Hadl guided the Rams to a 12-2 record and won the United Press International news service’s NFC Player of the Year award.

Then, five games into the 1974 season, Hadl faltered badly in a road game at Green Bay, completing just six of 16 passes with two interceptions. Instead of inserting a promising rookie, Ron Jaworski, Knox went for Harris. But he struggled too, completing just three passes and tossing two interceptions as the Rams lost 16-7 for a 3-2 record.

But, as Knox later recounted to Wulf, with the Rams already having lost as many games as they had the entire prior season, he had to make a drastic change. His faith in Harris paid off handsomely in the next game, as the black quarterback went 12-of-15 for 276 yards, three touchdowns and a 158.3 passer rating in a 37-14 rout of San Francisco. Two days later, the Rams traded away Hadl.

Harris and Knox produced a stellar record together, with trips to the NFC Championship Game in both 1974 and 1975. In 1974, Harris led the NFC in passer rating and was chosen MVP of the Pro Bowl. Even so, hate mail and death threats poured in to him. In one case, the Rams posted security guards outside his hotel room and on the team’s sideline.

Knox did all he could to calm the waters.

“Coach Knox was like the good coaches you had and respected, like the people who coached you at the recreation center when you were growing up and were concerned about you as a person,” Harris recalled. “During that time, when there were no other black quarterbacks, having a coach like Coach Knox helped me relax. I got the feeling from him that I would not get cut after a bad play. With other teams, I was living one play at a time. And being a quarterback, we had a lot of one-on-one time. He would sit me down and let me know what was expected, what I would have to do. We had quite a few of those during some of the ups and downs of that time.”

When a knee injury sidelined Harris midway through the 1976 season, Knox could no longer protect him. The Rams’ owner, Carroll Rosenbloom, and general manager, Don Klosterman, insisted on more than a temporary replacement for Harris. They wanted him replaced, and they were in the midst of choosing one of four white quarterbacks: Jaworski, Pat Haden, Joe Namath and Vince Ferragamo.

The demotion of Harris, and his ultimate trade to the San Diego Chargers in early 1977, became a major racial issue in Los Angeles. Skip Bayless, then of the Los Angeles Times, devoted a three-part series to it. African-American members of both the City Council and the state legislature advocated on Harris’ behalf, as did the leading black sportswriter in town, Brad Pye of the Los Angeles Sentinel.

As Harris shipped out to San Diego, his spirits broken, he had a final conversation with Knox. “He told me he believed in my ability,” Harris recalled.

Over the passing decades, the coach and quarterback spoke occasionally, and always warmly, until Knox slid into the dementia that ultimately would kill him at age 86.

Knox’s legacy now is more than his 186 wins with Los Angeles, Seattle and Buffalo, more than his three NFC Coach of the Year awards. Long before anyone had given the word “woke” its current, adjectival meaning, Knox was woke enough to do something no other head coach had even done: Put the best quarterback on the field, irrespective of color, and stick with him against all the hate. Knox’s funeral service was private, but one can only hope someone made the point in a eulogy.

Now, 44 years after Knox gave Harris his chance, there are many black quarterbacks in the league. But, amid the ongoing quarantine of Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid for their political activism, where are the Chuck Knoxes in the coaching ranks?

An earlier version of this story should have said Knox won a total of 186 games in Seattle, Los Angeles and Buffalo. He was the offense line coach in Detroit, not the head coach.



[theundefeated.com]

Disgusting Late Hit in Japanese College Football.

I’m learning Japanese and plan to spend some time there at some point.

The culture is very different.

Saving face is paramount. People will do insane things to save face.

Honestly, I don’t see how American football fits the culture. Sorta like Sumo doesn’t fit in America.

The hit was disgusting and beyond unacceptable. What’s bad is that the player knew this prior and still did it because of a very rigid social structure.

Hope the QB recovers from the hit quickly.

Josh Reynolds has been rehabbing a torn labrum he suffered in the playoffs

I think Obo being out is a big deal. Hes a rookie that needs all the reps he can get.
I'm not as concerned about Barron or Reynolds.
I agree that Obo being injured is a big deal. The point I was making is, let's not bunch in Barron's and Reynold's injuries into the fray, as Barron's injury was known about even before last season ended, knowing he was going to have surgery, and that it was a six month recovery. And Reynolds injury is healed to the point of him being able to be a full participate in yesterday's OTAs and in all the other off season conditioning activities, so it's a non-issue.
But like you I too am concerned about Okoronkwo.

Obo Okoronkwo has foot surgery

Okoronkwo to Miss Rest of Offseason Program with Foot Injury

View: http://www.therams.com/news-and-events/article-1/Okoronkwo-to-Miss-Rest-of-Offseason-Program-with-Foot-Injury/05367261-3ad2-47c6-a17f-738c0c4b78b9


Though most of the news from the Rams’ first OTA was quite positive, head coach Sean McVay shared one unfortunate piece of injury news: rookie outside linebacker Obo Okoronkwo suffered a foot injury and will be out until training camp.McVay said the injury did require surgery, which went well.

“With Obo, unfortunately he had a little foot injury. Got some surgery, but expect him to be back for training camp at some point,” McVay said. “When that timetable is, not exactly sure. But we’re excited about the way his surgery went last week and optimistic about him being able to make a return at some point. Not sure when that will be.”

The Rams traded up to select Okoronkwo at No. 160 overall in the fifth round. The outside linebacker recorded 33.0 tackles for loss and 20.0 sacks in his four seasons at Oklahoma. He is still expected to be a potential factor as a pass rusher in the defensive rotation for Los Angeles in 2018.

Los Angeles Rams rookie EDGE Ogbonnia Okoronkwo suffers broken foot, will require surgery

https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2018/...ogbonnia-okoronkwo-injury-broken-foot-surgery

Injury. It’s always the biggest villain.It has struck again in the form of a broken foot for Los Angeles Rams rookie EDGE Ogbonnia Okoronkwo during practices in Phase II of the offseason program.

It’s a tough blow for fans who were expecting Okoronkwo to make a big splash as a rookie. Following the trade of OLB Robert Quinn and having not brought in any veterans to the position like re-signing OLB Connor Barwin or an oft-rumored acquisition of EDGE Junior Galette, the Rams certainly had room for a potential starting opportunity for Okoronkwo. While OLB Samson Ebukam and OLB Matt Longacre have been penciled in as the likely starters, there was always going to be a chance for Okoronkwo to break out in training camp and the preseason, a chance that looks diminished now. The timetable should have him back somewhere between the start of camp and the start of the regular season.

His absence should open snaps up for the rest of the EDGE depth chart, but we’ll have to see how things look throughout Phase III and into camp and how the rehab on his foot progresses
Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/Rich_Hammond/status/998699719080660992

Interviews: McVay, Noteboom 05/15/18

The Orlovsky comments on Mcvay are so true. The dude is a master illusionist.

Ive spent some time this week rewatching last years games since I’m *coff* a little under the weather and taking some sick time.

So many plays have wide open WR’s and huge running lanes.

Mcvay is really excellent with calling the right play vs a defensive formation and coaching up his players how to execute the play to perfection.

There is so much built in deception to so many of the plays and all the players are always in perfect timing and on the right assignment. It’s a thing of beauty.

Here is a nice little breakdown on the Rams offense from some Vikings Homers, they do a good job of showing some of the concepts Mcvay uses to get guys open. Using Tavon in motion, lineman out in space and Gurley as a decoy on pass plays. Take a watch if you
Haven’t seen it.

Login to view embedded media View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=M-V7471MClw
Man, this just gave me a serious jonsesing for football. Love those blocking schemes, and how well we executed some of them.

With the 147th pick in the draft the Rams select Micah Kiser ILB

Login to view embedded media View: http://www.therams.com/news-and-events/article-1/After-Winning-Campbell-Trophy-Kiser-Ready-for-Challenge-of-NFL/1b6f3ef4-adfd-472f-8752-bd37e571e18a


After Winning Campbell Trophy, Kiser Ready for Challenge of NFL


Rams rookie linebacker Micah Kiser is best known on the field for leading the ACC in tackles three years in a row. It’s a feat previously accomplished by now Panthers All-Pro linebacker Luke Kuechly.

“I just play hard — that’s just what I do,” Kiser said this week. “You play linebacker, you want to make as many tackles as you can. So [I’m a] hard-nose player, [give] great effort all the time, and I was really smart so I could make a lot of plays.’

But if there’s anything that separates Kiser from many of the players in his draft class, it’s what he said about being “really smart.” Sure, it’s tough to be a football player at any level and succeed without a proper above-the-neck approach. But the Virginia product takes that to a very high level.

Kiser was awarded the Campbell Trophy after the 2017 season. You may not have heard of the honor, but it’s given by the National Football Foundation to the college football player with the best combination of academics, community service, and on-field performance.
Informally, it’s known as the academic Heisman.

So, yes, that was a big deal for Kiser and his family.

“My parents raised me to do everything I can to the best of my abilities, so they invested in me going to good schools from an early age — great high schools, great middle schools,” Kiser said. “I went to a great University at UVA that had great influences and people to help me out. I took advantage of everything I had in my life and wanted to be the best at everything I was doing. On field, I was striving to be the best and then off field I was striving to be the best as well.

“That’s just the kind of guy I am,” Kiser continued. “That’s what my makeup is all about and I want to keep doing that in the future.”

It seems like it would be difficult to balance being so successful in both academics and athletics, but Kiser said his support system at Virginia enabled him to be successful in both areas.

“I’ve been doing it my whole life really,” Kiser said. “I went to the Gilman School in Bal
timore which is a pretty hard school, a college-preparatory school. But we also had great athletics as well, so I was balancing those then. Went to UVA and like I said, the athletic administration there is great at helping you, getting you the academic support you need. And the coaching staff is great. I had a lot of positive influences and a lot of great help, so they made it — I’m not going to say easy ,but they helped me along the way. I just took advantage of it all.”

Kiser graduated from UVA with a bachelor’s degree in foreign affairs and is pursuing a master’s degree in higher education.
“I’m halfway through that,” he said. “I’m very interested in athletic administration and hopefully when I get some time, I can go back and finish that.”

But until then, he’s focusing on football — a game he loves and is quite passionate about.

“I can remember early on in life when I was six years old, when I turned six the Ravens had won the Super Bowl,” Kiser said. “I was very big into football and my dad got us the Super Bowl tape and every Saturday I used to watch basically the whole season from start to finish. I would watch it every single Saturday and I would know all the players. For my sixth birthday, I got my own room and it was Ravens-themed. I got all the players autographs and just loved the game from an early age.

“I played flag football, played tackle football since I was eight, played high school ball. Just always been around football and being on a team, being around the guys, and just working hard and being selfless to achieve something greater than yourself,” Kiser continued. “That’s what this culture here with the Rams is all about. It’s we not me and it’s the standard and that’s just all about being bought in for the team. Just how I came up and coming up here is a great fit.”

I'm getting more and more excited about this kid...
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This time around, Day 1 of OTAs won't feel like starting over for the Rams

D-Lineman like Donald...don't need camp to blend in....probably a quarter of a real game...maybe 2.

As long as he's staying in shape....and if I remember the stories about Donald...and his pops...dudes coming into to camp paid...and ready to perform...in tip top shape.

Shane Waldron, the tight ends coach in 2017, is the pass-game coordinator. Zac Taylor, assistant receivers coach last season, is the quarterbacks coach. Jedd Fisch, UCLA's offensive coordinator in 2017, is a senior offensive assistant.

I keep forgetting about this:oops::unsure:

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