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Rams Preview: Case Keenum won the QB job, personifies team’s uncertainty

QB Envy is something all of us long time Rams know too well. But so do most teams in the NFL. Finding the next star QB is what every single team strives for, because without a star QB, winning a Super Bowl is almost never gonna happen.

I remember every QB in that article. I liked some of them more than others... Everett was one of my favorites (named a dog after him "Blade"). Dieter was my least favorite LOL. Regardless, I cheered for all of them.

Goff may not be ready for opening game. Not surprising considering how he was coached in college and with the new CBA restrictions for practices. I'm just thankful that our coaching staff isn't afraid to do what's best for the kid's development... many scared less experienced coaches would cave to the media's lame story lines.

While I'm waiting for Goff's first start, I'm gonna root for our vertically challenged QB Keenum to take care of business for our offense. I know Case will be replaced at some point... but HOT DAMN it's great to know that we have the hopeful cure to all of our QB Envy already on the team. We're preparing the cure correctly guys... it's almost ready.
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Big Rob getting the start at RT?

I know they will not do this, but i'm leaning towards wanting Saffold healthy for the play-offs, ... meaning keep him as our designated first swing player off the bench, and/or in a rotational role with an assigned starter. I feel Wichmann has done enough to earn a starting slot at LG, Brown is still a work in progress in pass pro, but he also missed a good deal of time last year. Brown needs snaps, and being we'll be a rush first team, his value as a run blocker is invaluable. We don't have much behind our OT or OG positions with Reynolds on IR, so get Saffold some work, but keep him fresh and uninjured. I understand the argument for having what may be one of your best players starting, also your most expensive, but i'm going to take the less popular view this time around. jmo.

I actually agree with this. I don't think that Wichmann and Brown have done anything to lose their jobs. Saffold is the only player on our team who can play left tackle aside from Robinson. Havenstein and Barnes don't need any explanation.
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No New love for LA Rams

The press and his opponents highlighted President Bush’s occasional stumbles when giving a speech. Barry hussein obama similar verbal miscues are ignored.There is a bias in much of the liberal lame-stream press and commentary that people from outside of NY-BOS-WAS-CHI-SEA-SF-LA are less intelligent, or at least well educated. Many public commenters harbor an anti-Texas (and anti-Southern, and anti-Midwestern) intellectual bias.

(n)

Lets take the politics to another forum. The country may be divided in many respects, ... Rams fans are not !

Kevin Demoff helps Rams find their way back to L.A.

By Sam Farmer

[www.latimes.com]

All Kevin Demoff wanted to do was get on with the basketball game. But everyone else on the court was frozen in place, transfixed by the familiar, hulking man in the stands. It was Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino, who had slipped into the gymnasium of the small school in Brentwood to watch Kevin, the fourth-grade son of his agent, try his hand at point guard.

“The other nine kids on the court were just staring at Dan,” Demoff recalled. “And I’m like, ‘Hey, we’ve got a game to win here.’ I didn’t even think about it.”

As the football world would learn decades later, Demoff is unruffled by the big stage. The Rams’ top executive, whose childhood was steeped in pro football, was an integral figure in untangling the most confounding knot in professional sports. Demoff, 39, was key in bringing the NFL back to Los Angeles for the first time in 22 years.

It was Rams owner Stan Kroenke who had resources and vision for a transformational stadium project at Hollywood Park, but Demoff was the point guard when it came to selling that Inglewood concept to the rest of the league.

“I’m fortunate to have the tutelage of Stan, who has really pioneered how you combine resources and sports in a way that has never been done before,” said Demoff, the Rams’ executive vice president of football operations and chief operating officer. “I’m grateful for his mentorship. He pushes our team for greatness and challenges us to envision the impossible.”

In January, what once was impossible became a reality. By a 30-2 vote, NFL owners chose the Inglewood project over a competing plan in Carson jointly backed by the San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders.

“In my 45 years in the movie business, I’ve heard some very exciting pitches for movies,” said Steve Tisch, co-owner of the New York Giants and an Oscar-winning film producer. “Kevin’s pitch for the Rams’ new stadium at Hollywood Park was just as powerful. He was passionate, informative, prepared and dynamic. … It was like watching a great trailer for a movie.”

The rail-thin Demoff, who seemed to grow grayer by the day, was under intense pressure in recent years as he fought the stadium battles in St. Louis and navigated a new path in Los Angeles, where so many others had tried and failed to get football venues built.

Many Rams fans in St. Louis revile Demoff, accusing him of being an architect of a deception. They argue Kroenke was determined to relocate the team to Los Angeles, and only paid lip service, by way of Demoff, to staying in St. Louis.

Demoff said suspicions surfaced even before arbitrators ruled in favor of the Rams in early 2013, paving the way for the team to get out of its lease two years later.

“When you work at a team, your job is to build an emotional connection with the fan base,” Demoff said. “The [St. Louis] stadium situation always gave reason for fans to not completely commit to you. Because in the back, deep part of their minds, there were stadium issues that were unresolved. And even worse, it was a city that had lost a team before.”

In the summer of 2014, when Kroenke took control of the 300 acres at Hollywood Park, the prospect of a move back to Southern California became more real.

“Now you had a site that the NFL had long coveted, an owner with the expertise and resources to do it the way the NFL had always wanted to do it, and a team that had the right to relocate,” Demoff said.

“Even then, the best project and opportunity in Los Angeles never guaranteed success. No one had figured out this Rubik’s Cube for so long.”

Problem-solving is in Demoff’s DNA. His father, a former public defender, soared to the top of the sports-representation business by finding creative ways to structure contracts when other agents might fall back on boilerplate solutions.

“He’s creative, he’s patient, he’s fair,” Kevin said of his father. “Ultimately, he just listens, reasons, comes up with solutions. He was always trying to look for a win-win.”

Marvin and Patti Demoff still live in the same Benedict Canyon home where they raised their two children, Kevin and Allison. Before the age of cellphones, the family had four land lines and a fax line, as Marvin liked to be home for dinner and would work there into the night.

Sometimes, Kevin would quietly pick up a phone and eavesdrop on his dad’s negotiations. Other times, he’d sit near his dad and try to imagine what was being said on the other end of the line.

“You’re a kid; you’re always thinking about how you can get one over on your parents,” he said. “That’s your job in life. So I spent a lot of time thinking about how I could negotiate against my father. What would I say? That’s what I basically spent a lot of my childhood doing.”

Marvin, 73, had an all-world stable of clients that included Marino, John Elway, Shannon Sharpe, Junior Seau, Jonathan Ogden and Tim Brown, and Rams such as Jack Youngblood and Jim Everett.

Years ago, the NFL draft started on a Thursday at 5 a.m. on the West Coast and lasted into the night. That was like a holiday in the Demoff household.

“What I loved about the draft was I got to skip that morning of school,” Kevin said. “I had to go to school when the first round was over. So I would always hope for the really long first round with lots of trades. We used to bring in bagels and donuts at 4:30 in the morning, sit in the den in our pajamas and watch.”

Kevin was 6 in 1983, when his dad represented both No. 1 pick Elway and No. 27 Marino. That was the best draft ever for quarterbacks. But what Kevin remembers is another of his father’s clients, running back Curt Warner, watching on TV from their house. After being selected third overall by the Seahawks, he and Kevin spent the rest of the morning shooting baskets.

Although Kevin religiously followed lots of sports, he was partial to football. At 10, he’d spend hours reading football magazines and devising mock drafts. He and his dad were in an early fantasy football league, too, with teams printed on big spreadsheets and scored by hand. They played against lawyers at his dad’s firm, and ran circles around them. One season, he was a ball boy for the Chargers, a club he would later go head-to-head against in the acrimonious stadium derby.

“I became fascinated with the elements of managing a team and how it worked,” he said.

When he went to college at Dartmouth, however, he did not envision working for a team or being an agent. He wanted to be a sportswriter. He was sports editor at the school’s paper, and called games on the college radio station.

Upon graduating, he went to work for a start-up Internet company that eventually got into the business of designing websites for teams. One of his pitches was to the Oakland Raiders, where he met team executive Bruce Allen.


Around that time, Casey Wasserman was starting the Arena Football League’s Los Angeles Avengers, and needed someone to run the personnel side. He called Allen for staffing advice, and Allen suggested he reach out to Demoff, who was 23 at the time. Wasserman, then 24, wound up hiring him.

“What Kevin and I realized is that, if you go and work for an NFL team, you don’t really have a massive impact as a young kid,” Wasserman said. “You only learn what they want you to learn. In the Arena League, we were all in, all responsible for all of it. That was our PhD in sports.”

Demoff said that was his opportunity to learn the team side of the business “and make a ton of mistakes without anybody ever seeing them.”

After four years, he was ready to take the next step.

“Ultimately, I decided I didn’t want my life decided on whether a ball bounced off a net or a post, or went into the stands, and that it was time to grow a skill set,” he said.

Demoff decided to return to business school at Dartmouth, but not before Allen offered him a front-office job with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, where he had rejoined former Raiders coach Jon Gruden.

Demoff considered going to the NFL, but eventually opted for graduate school. “Why don’t you do both?” Allen said, and brought him on as an unpaid intern. He would send projects to Demoff at Dartmouth, then bring him down for the Senior Bowl, scouting combine and training camp.

“Kevin grew up the same way as I did,” said Allen, son of Hall of Fame coach George Allen. “It was from a slightly different perspective, but he had the same understanding of the game, the league, the players and the coaches, because of not only Marvin’s presence in the league but his domination of the league.”

The day after Demoff graduated, he was with the Buccaneers as a full-time employee, and he and his wife, Jenn, set up shop in Tampa. While living there, they would have their daughter, Claire.

A few years later, they would move to St. Louis, where Kevin took a job with the Rams, and Jenn had their son, Owen. Demoff was in his early 30s and running an NFL franchise.

“I’m not naive,” he said. “I got a lot of opportunities in my life and football because of my last name, and I’m grateful for that. I didn’t deserve the Avengers job when I got it. I didn’t deserve the Rams job when I got it. Both were taking leaps of faith on me based on my father and what he’d done, and somewhat based on my career. You hope from there you can go earn it.”

In January, at a Houston hotel, Demoff delivered his final presentation of Kroenke’s vision to the rest of the NFL owners. After a series of votes, Inglewood beat Carson in a landslide, and the Rams were given the green light to return to Los Angeles. Since, the Rams moved, traded up for the No. 1 pick and helped secure a Super Bowl for Inglewood at the end of the 2020 season.

“It’s surreal,” said Patti Demoff, a college counselor. “They’re here, but it almost feels like an out-of-body experience. I have to keep reminding myself the Rams aren’t just here visiting.”

Both of his parents point to the fact that Demoff was a history major at Dartmouth, with an emphasis in art history. They said his creative side allows him to look at problems from many different angles, and to see solutions others might miss.

“What it allowed him to do is really get Stan’s vision and be able to explain it to others,” Marvin said. “When he showed you a picture of what Inglewood is going to look like, he could see the art form, the vision, and be passionate about that vision the way people would be passionate about a piece of art.”

Of course, with the Demoffs, it all comes down to the art of the deal. Father and son will be on the opposite sides of the table in the coming days as they hammer out details of an expected contract extension for Rams Coach Jeff Fisher, represented by Marvin.

“It’s like playing chess or checkers against yourself,” Kevin said. “Our styles are so similar, you focus on the same things. So you always wind up in a draw or stalemate. I can always tell when we’ve reached the logical conclusion of a negotiation, because I’ll say, ‘Do you have any other solutions?’ and he says, ‘No . . . but I raised you better than this.’”

Marvin has a picture on his desk from Patti’s 40th birthday party in 1987. It’s of the family, grouped together at the Hollywood Park finish line. A great memory. Kevin has already planned an updated shot to go with it: the family, much larger now, standing at midfield of the new stadium when it opens in 2019 — a different kind of finish line.

Must read...if you haven't seen it already

As preseason comes to a close, people rush to sort things, sufficient information be dratted, and Los Angeles Rams #1 pick Jared Goff is not immune. Jon Ledyard takes a look at Jared Goff’s preseason to contextualize this struggles and concludes that there is no need to hit the panic button yet.
When the Los Angeles Rams made Jared Goff the first overall pick in the 2016 draft, trading away a plethora of picks in the process, the selection came with the expectation that the former California Golden Bears passer would become the face of the newly relocated franchise.

What the Rams didn’t specify, of course, was when that transition would occur, or how soon they wanted Goff to helm the offense that finished dead last in passing yards per game last season.

Many long-suffering L.A. fans obviously expected (Read: hoped) the move would come immediately, eager to see their young signal caller at work in the same backfield as 2015 offensive rookie of the year Todd Gurley. Jeff Fisher had other ideas, however, naming Case Keenum the starter in June and saying Goff would start “whenever he was ready.”

Still, one would have assumed that Goff would get a fair shot at the starting spot, if for no other reason than the fact that Keenum has proven very little over his four-year NFL career, completing 56 percent of his passes for just over 3,000 yards. As we exit the preseason however, Keenum ran nine drives with the first team offense in comparison to Goff’s two, and was recently confirmed as the starting quarterback for when the Rams take the field for Week 1 against the49ers. In fact, Jeff Fisher said last night after Los Angeles’ 27-25 loss to the Vikings that Sean Mannion would be his second string option if the season started today.

This was never a quarterback competition, and it is important to understand that here at the outset. Keenum was placed at the table with a full house in his hand (or whatever the most compatible version of that the Rams can scrape together is), while Goff was left with a pair of deuces. The Rams wanted to sit Goff to start the season regardless of what was shown on the field and, because Keenum hasn’t completely imploded, they now have the ability to do so.


The predictable imbalance between the two quarterbacks’ supporting casts was evident throughout the preseason, particularly when Goff went under center to deal with, well, this:

The sad part is: That isn’t even all of the poorly run routes or drops that Goff had to endure. As poor as it was, though, perhaps none of of the miscues were quite as egregious as this gaffe by Pharoh Cooper in the Rams’ first preseason game against the Cowboys.

Goff faces a 2nd-and-10 situation with the ball on the Cowboys 37-yard line and just 35 seconds left in the first half. With all three timeouts at his disposal, the Rams quarterback knows he can challenge any area of the field in his attempt to navigate his team into at least field goal range before the end of the half.

At the snap, Dallas drops into a Cover 2 zone with safeties J.J. Wilcox and Kavon Frazier manning the two deep halves of the field. Rookie Michael Thomas is isolated on the backside of the Rams’ 3X1 look, but the receiver falls asleep on the snap and is far too slow off the line of scrimmage, prompting Goff to look elsewhere.

Cooper’s deep post, on the other hand, carries him to the Cover 2 hole between the safeties, and Goff places a perfect laser right on the receiver’s numbers. Wilcox does a good job of closing the window to put a hit on Cooper, though, and the pass catcher can’t hang on for what would have been a huge completion to give the Rams a first-and-goal.

That’s a big boy throw by a rookie quarterback playing with all backups in his first NFL game, and an encouraging sign for Goff’s development. There were questions about his arm strength and velocity entering the draft and, while that aspect of his game may never be elite, Goff’s tools appear more than adequate when observing him against NFL secondaries.

Note the excellent pace on this throw to Higbee on a deep comeback route, fitting the ball in to the receiver before Wilcox can close over the top. Some have knocked Goff for not making many high degree of difficulty throws in his first three games, but those complaints ignore the context of the system in which the rookie is performing. The Rams offensive approach features many West Coast principles with short timing patterns designed to stretch the field horizontally before attacking it vertically. Accuracy and ball placement are paramount to a quarterback’s success in a West Coast offense, two areas of the game that are Goff’s greatest strengths.

Where Goff has struggled is in his progressions, by no means an unusual weakness for a rookie quarterback still adjusting to the pace of the NFL.

The Rams came out in 11 personnel to start the second half against the Chiefs in Goff’s second preseason game, one where the quarterback looked to rebound from a frustrating first half. The Chiefs show man coverage right away off the snap, but Goff locks onto his first read anyway, zipping a throw to Brian Quick despite the fact that the receiver has gained no separation on his comeback route.

First, this is a really poor route by Quick, who stops at the top of his pattern rather than coming back to the football, generally considered a no-no when running a comeback route. Still, the decision isn’t a good one for Goff, who has to recognize when the window isn’t there and move to his next progression, especially given the time he has in the pocket. If he had, he would have seen the outside receiver to his left, Thomas, come open underneath against Steven Nelsonfor what could have been a big gain.

Similarly, against Denver the Rams come out in 12 personnel with rookie tight end Tyler Higbee in the slot to Goff’s left. Please note that, for the second consecutive drive, the Rams reserves are in the game with Goff against most of Denver’s starting defense. Again, right off the snap Goff’s eyes are locked onto his target, allowing safety Darian Stewart an easy read and break on the ball.


Stewart drops the easiest pick-six he’ll ever see in his life here, as Goff, in his eagerness to hit his route on time and get the ball out of his hand, forgoes his progressions and dispenses with any sense of field awareness.

These are common mistakes for a rookie that are nothing to be concerned about right now; In addition, Goff’s supporting cast has been dreadful, and the Los Angeles coaches have not put him in the best position to succeed.

Granted, Goff has not been perfect either. Nevertheless, I’ve counted 9-12 drops (depending on what you expect to be a catch) and two interceptions that came as results of poor protection – mistakes that have had disastrous effects on Goff’s preseason numbers. Nine more catches on those dropped passes would elevate Goff’s completion percentage from 45 percent to just over 63 percent, a far cry from the bleak statistical results that have been paraded all over social media for the past few weeks.

In the final preseason game against Minnesota, Goff looked excellent on the opening drive, marching the offense down the field on just his third possession of the entire preseason with the starters. He made plays inside and outside of the pocket before capping the drive with an extremely well-placed touchdown pass to Kenny Britt’s outside shoulder despite tight coverage from Mackensie Alexander. If not for a Brian Quick drop to begin the drive, Goff would have finished a perfect 4-4.

Then things began to unravel. Goff took a few shots and started rushing and sailing passes. The low point came when he dropped a shotgun snap at his own 7-yard line, a mistake that several Minnesota defenders pounced on after the quarterback took his eyes off the ball to survey the secondary a tad early. Goff will need to be better than these mistakes moving forward, even as a rookie, but nothing he’s put on tape so far is unusual or worse than your typical young quarterback mistakes. Unfortunately for Goff, those mistakes have only been exacerbated by the extremely low level of play around him, to say nothing of the expectations that accompany being the number one overall pick at the game’s most important position.

In the proper context, we can see that while Goff certainly has aspects of his game that need work, the Rams’ franchise quarterback has not been close to as bad as his numbers or the common media narratives (or even his head coach?) would suggest. Had he been given an equal opportunity to win the starting quarterback job over Case Keenum, Goff might certainly have done so – but we’ll never know given the situation and personnel with which he was asked to perform.

Few would claim Goff is ready to be a successful starting quarterback in the NFL, but is Keenum? In short, let’s not bury Goff just yet, as the young quarterback will receive much better opportunities from which to judge his caliber of play than the ones he has been given thus far this preseason.

Click link for accompanying videos....
http://insidethepylon.com/nfl/teams...02/jared-goffs-preseason-dont-panic-just-yet/

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Week 1 Game Release (pdf)

Some very interesting stats.....

Most Interception, 2012 Draft Class INTs

1. Trumaine Johnson, LA 15
2. Harrison Smith, MIN 12
3. Luke Kuechly, CAR 11
4. Janoris Jenkins, NYG 10
5t. Lavonte David, TB 9
5t. Stephon Gilmore, BUF 9
5t. Casey Hayward, GB 9


Rams All-Time Leaders, TDs by a TE TDs

1. Damone Johnson, 1986-92 18
2. Billy Traux, 1964-70 16
3t. Lance Kendricks, 2011-present 15
3t. Bob Klein, 1969-76 15
5. Troy Drayton, 1993-96 14

Most Career Touchdowns by WRs, 2013 Draft TDs

1t. Tavon Austin, LA 19
1t. DeAndre Hopkins, HOU 19
3t. Keenan Allen, SD 16
3t. Terrance Williams, DAL 16
5. Cordarrelle Patterson, MIN 13

2015 NFC Leaders, Total Touchdowns By WR TDs

1. Doug Baldwin, SEA 14
2. Odell Beckham, NYG 13
3t. Tavon Austin, LA 10
3t. Ted Ginn, CAR 10
5t. Four tied 9

Highest Net Punting Average in a Season (Since 1976) Player Punts Net Avg

1. Johnny Hekker, LA - 2013 78 44.2
2. Andy Lee, SF - 2011 78 44.0
3. Shane Lechler, OAK - 2009 96 43.9
4. Johnny Hekker, LA - 2015 91 43.7
5. Sam Koch, BAL - 2014 60 43.3
" How Sweat it is!!" (y);):D
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OLd Rams games on a cloud:just click

I bought a bunch of Rams games on DVD and then got some others f rom youtube.
I have about 300+. Here are some I put up. These links are good for about 30 days or so....
Just click. This "cloud" is in France....so, download them from 10am and 11pm eastern time for the fastest
download times. Ask if you want another game, they are all free.

1980 Week 8 Rams at Falcons- ENTIRE.mp4 1.18 GB https://1fichier.com/?5j9n5nbank

1983 Rams vs 9ers 1.VOB 1023.97 MB https://1fichier.com/?vx0fsagulz
1983 Rams vs 9ers 2.VOB 1023.97 MB https://1fichier.com/?bjz5smkspp
1983 Rams vs 9ers 3.VOB 1023.97 MB https://1fichier.com/?zixb0suus2
1983 Rams vs 9ers 4.VOB 1023.97 MB https://1fichier.com/?1r0mynpzlh

1983 2nd game: Rams vs 49er game
1983 49ers at Rams 1983-10-23 .mkv 1.04 GB https://1fichier.com/?au7vrt6k3y

1980 MNF Rams vs Dallas

Rams vs Cowbys MNF #1.flv 323.87 MB https://1fichier.com/?agftm8k2qq
Rams vs Cowbys MNF #2.flv 324.72 MB https://1fichier.com/?vlz1dikg9r
Rams vs Cowbys MNF #3.flv 342.24 MB https://1fichier.com/?9bibg6lh7l
Rams vs Cowbys MNF #4.flv 326.24 MB https://1fichier.com/?1my8bhr5rd

Rams vs Dallas Cowboy 1980 Playoffs 1st Half .flv 672.88 MB https://1fichier.com/?znb7a8rad8
Rams vs Dallas Cowboy 1980Playoffs 2nd Half.flv 541.82 MB https://1fichier.com/?s4tt1rzr3b

1980 wk 2 - Rams at Buccaneers.mp4 666.56 MB https://1fichier.com/?zrwu8hl52g

1981-10-18 Los Angeles Rams vs Dallas Cowboys 1st Half.flv 786.01 MB https://1fichier.com/?682a4v0we1
1981-10-18 Los Angeles Rams vs Dallas Cowboys 2nd Half.flv 801.93 MB https://1fichier.com/?piqsmro2ah

1981 L.A. Rams vs New Orleans Saints 9_13_81 1st Half WK 2.mp4 502.68 MB https://1fichier.com/?yv7ckb9ww6
1981 L.A. Rams vs New Orleans Saints 9_13_81 2nd Half WK 2.mp4 546.57 MB https://1fichier.com/?dmtaxdf9gg

1982 Rams vs 49ers Finale.mp4 2.40 GB https://1fichier.com/?sy849itxpn

1982 Rams vs Bears 1.VOB 1023.46 MB https://1fichier.com/?cntrxs8e3x
1982 Rams vs Bears 2.VOB 1023.46 MB https://1fichier.com/?qznxxkmonn
1982 Rams vs Bears 3.VOB 1023.46 MB https://1fichier.com/?623svowd13
1982 Rams vs Bears 4.VOB 983.13 MB https://1fichier.com/?morjbwwboi
1982 Rams vs Bears 5.VOB 1023.46 MB https://1fichier.com/?djgvklo8ji
1982 Rams vs Bears 6.VOB 1023.46 MB https://1fichier.com/?zu1w7mf7l1
1982 Rams vs Bears 7.VOB 1023.46 MB https://1fichier.com/?vv6t4dctvy
1982 Rams vs Bears 8.VOB 990.84 MB https://1fichier.com/?f3xdc6j349

1979 Rams vs Bucs NFC Champ game.mkv 2.18 GB https://1fichier.com/?0pcc00rbdz

Downtown Rams Podcast Ep.1: Roster Cuts, Season Preview, NFL Draft Preview & Season Predictions

I listened to it all and you guys have interesting opinions and points of view. It was just a bit much lengthwise and probably would have been more appetizing as a quick draft thing overall, then focus on Rams draft, then cuts, then more in depth game discussion this week. I like podcasts that arm me for the coming smack talk / ejection and banning from the enemy's board. I appreciate your effort and enjoyed it.

Welcome to ROD. You get the chinese dance video:

Login to view embedded media
hahaha thank you again I promise we will continue to get better and really cutdown the time

Rams cut David Arkin

What do you mean a fake out? Was this just so they didn't have to pay Cam's whole salary? He didn't make the end of camp roster but I thought it was the opening game day roster that determined if he got guaranteed money for the season.

I hope they have a good weight loss program.
They might have told Thomas they'd re-sign him before Week 1. Cutting and re-signing him before Week 1 doesn't affect his money or guarantees. As you pointed out it's being on the roster come Week 1 that determines guarantees for veterans.

This might have been about O-Line depth. They might not wanted to risk losing both Arkin and Battle. They kept Arkin and cut Battle to see if he would make it to the practice squad. Once they secured his services they knew they could cut Arkin to create space for Thomas and still have 1 spare OL on the PS if Arkin was claimed. Perhaps there was a plan B if Battle was claimed.

The Rams might have been planning to re-sign Ayers and Thomas after Week 1 to remove 2016 guarantees but having lost Ayers to a team prepared to fully guarantee all of his 2016 salary they might have had 2nd thoughts about Thomas. All speculation on my part. Skulduggery makes the NFL World go round.

Fantasy football season!

Here's mine:

QB: Andrew Luck
RB: David Johnson (I know, I missed out on Todd by ONE pick..)
RB: Adrian Peterson
WR: DeAndre Hopkins
WR: Amari Cooper
TE: Gary Barnidge
K: Brad McMannus
DST: Broncos

Bench
QB: Jameis Winston
RB: Le'Veon Bell
RB: Gio Bernard
RB: Duke Johnson
WR: Keenan Allen (yes, on my bench)
WR: John Brown (I know)
WR: Tavon Austin

Lot of flexibility for me.

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