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TNF - Packers at Cardinals

Thursday Night Football: Green Bay Packers vs. Arizona Cardinals​

Both the Green Bay Packers and Arizona Cardinals control their own destiny in the race for home-field advantage in the NFC postseason bracket. The Cardinals (7-0) remain the only unbeaten team left in the NFL, the maturation of quarterback Kyler Murray fostering one of the league's most potent offensive attacks. Victories over fellow Super Bowl contenders in the Titans, Browns, and Rams made an early statement, Arizona racking up a league-leading plus-111 scoring margin through seven games.

Green Bay, however, poses a different challenge, capable of going punch-for-punch on offense through the play of quarterback Aaron Rodgers. After a rocky opening game against New Orleans, the Packers (6-1) have won six straight, their former NFL MVP throwing 15 touchdowns during that stretch while turning the ball over only once.

Expect offensive fireworks in a game that has must-win implications for both teams. A loss by the Packers would put them three games behind the Cardinals, handing them the home-field tiebreaker with nine games left to play. Considering the Rams, Browns and Ravens are still left on the Packers' schedule, that gap would appear too large to make up.

Meanwhile, a loss by the Cardinals knocks them out of the top seed, leaving them just a half-game up on the Rams in their own division. It means the warm-weather team could face the prospect of potentially heading up to Lambeau Field for the NFC Championship Game, one of the coldest and most difficult places to play for road teams once January hits. It's not a place a young team with limited playoff experience would like to be.

So, can Green Bay put itself back in the NFC driver's seat, Rodgers wiping away the last dirty remnants of an ugly offseason standoff? The Cardinals would be a great team to finish that rehab against; he hasn't won against them since 2012 and is 0-2 all-time against Arizona in the playoffs. Who will put more points on the board in one of the biggest games of the year to date?

Thursday Night Football: Green Bay (6-1) at Arizona (7-0)

Kickoff: Thursday, Oct. 28 at 8:20 p.m. ET
TV: FOX/NFL Network/Amazon Prime
Spread: Cardinals -6

Three Things to Watch

1. Rodgers vs. Murray

That's the battle everyone is paying to see. The latest BetMGM odds have Murray the odds-on favorite to win NFL MVP this season, eking past Dak Prescott of the Cowboys at +350 while Rodgers sits sixth at +1000.

Both men are largely responsible for making their team a top-tier Super Bowl contender. Murray's greatly improved his accuracy this year, leading the NFL with a 73.5 percent completion rate while slotting inside the top five in virtually every other category: QB rating (second), touchdown passes (T-fourth), and passing yards (fifth).

Murray's maturation has come in getting more people involved in the offense. There's a lot of mouths to feed, from top wideout DeAndre Hopkins to deep threat Christian Kirk and veteran A.J. Green. All three have been kept happy with more than 400 receiving yards, and now tight end Zach Ertz has been thrown into the mix, picked up from the Eagles in a trade. Ertz's debut last week included a career-high 47-yard touchdown catch, fitting right in with the high-flying offense.

As for Rodgers, he slots behind Murray this year in just about metric imaginable, from wins to yards per pass attempt, with one very important exception: taking care of the football. Rodgers has just three picks this year, two of them in that first-week wipeout against the Saints, and he hasn't lost a fumble yet.

Compare that to Murray, who's made a handful more mistakes (five INTs). He also gave up a safety last week against the lowly Houston Texans, got sacked a season-high four times, and endured a number of hard hits to the point he made multiple visits to the medical tent during the game.

Could that provide an opening for the Packers' defense to put more pressure on Murray? Their defense is tied for seventh in the NFL with 18 sacks, collecting 11 of them in the past three games alone. Murray's been difficult to take down, demoralizing defenders with his ability to escape tackles with his legs and throw downfield. Getting him just once, strip-sacking the football might be the difference-maker in a game each team could score on every possession.

Of course, escaping defenders is an art Rodgers has perfected himself over a decade-plus. Just last week, this across-his-body throw to Davante Adams against Washington is the type of MVP-level performance he's known for.

The problem for Rodgers and the Packers' defense, though may not be their on-field performance…

2. COVID-19 rears its ugly head for the Packers. How do they respond?

That's because defensive coordinator Joe Barry and wide receiver Davante Adams were placed on the league's Reserve/COVID-19 list on Monday. Adams was vaccinated, which means he can't be moved there without testing positive, and that puts his status for Thursday in serious doubt. He would need to be symptom-free with two negative tests 24 hours apart in order to be reactivated.

Both are huge losses for the Packers considering the offensive strength of Arizona. But here's a quirky stat for you: Green Bay is actually 6-0 through the last two seasons when Adams doesn't play.

"We're not a better team without him, that's for sure," Rodgers said when asked how the team handles an Adams absence. "We just found a way in each of those games."

Allen Lazard went on the COVID list on Tuesday, so he's likely out as well. Reliable veteran Randall Cobb will likely be called upon to step up. Cobb has been more targeted offensively the past month, catching 10 of his 14 passes the past four games — two of them for touchdowns. Tight end Robert Tonyan also is warming up after a quiet start, catching a season-high four passes for 63 yards and a touchdown last week against Washington.

Rodgers is the master of getting bit players to step into outsized roles when needed. On paper, this roster is outclassed by Arizona, but don't let a piece of paper fool you.

3. Which team runs the football more effectively?

One year after boasting a top-10 rushing offense for the first time since 2013, the Packers have remained committed to lead back Aaron Jones and AJ Dillon. A 57-yard rushing performance against Washington last week was an aberration, halting four straight games of 100-plus on the ground.

If there's a weakness both teams have, it's rushing defense. The Cardinals rank 18th overall against the run and allow 4.97 yards per carry (second-worst in the league behind the Chargers). If the Packers are willing to commit just enough, keeping the defense off-balance with Rodgers, Jones has the ability to exploit that. His explosive four-touchdown game against the Lions earlier this year was the first on "Monday Night Football" since Marshall Faulk in 2000.

Arizona's run game, meanwhile, doesn't get focused on enough with the dynamic play of Chase Edmonds and former Pittsburgh Steeler James Conner. And guess who ranks 30th in yards per carry allowed? Green Bay's defense. If Murray is hurting, that dual RB combo will need to carry the load and keep the chains moving on Thursday night.

Difference-Maker Stat: The Cardinals are the only team left in the NFL this season to convert every fourth down they've attempted on offense. They're 5-for-5 through seven games; no other NFL team is better than 77 percent. Arizona's defense also is holding teams to a league-best 25 percent when they try to convert on fourth down.

Final Analysis

Arizona was given a hefty six-point spread, respect after covering a 20.5-point mark against Houston the week before. I think that's too large against a veteran Packers team hungry to prove themselves. They know what's at stake in earning home-field advantage, enjoying that week off last year under the NFL's new expanded playoff system. It's also important to note that J.J. Watt has already been ruled out because of a shoulder injury (meaning he won't get to face his former team) and DeAndre Hopkins (hamstring) also is on the injury report. Watt's loss is significant while a less-than-100 percent Hopkins would balance the scales with an Adam-less Packers team.

Rodgers knows the MVP chatter around Murray and has a chance to knock the young quarterback down a peg. While I'd expect both to have outstanding performances, the 16-year vet has a proven history of pulling these games out in crunch time.

Prediction: Packers 38, Cardinals 35

Breaking News: J.J. Watt out for the year.......

Adam Schefter reports:
Cardinals’ DE J.J. Watt will undergo what is now likely to be season-ending shoulder surgery, sources tell ESPN. No date set yet for surgery.

Watt hurt his shoulder in the second quarter Sunday and still managed to play the rest of the game with the injury.
Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/AdamSchefter/status/1453550304650276865/photo/1


Watt was playing like a man possessed from what I saw in various Cardinal games. He will be missed but this also definitely helps the Rams!!

~ArkyRamsFan~

Game Day Report: Took the fam to SoFi...

Belatedly, a report of our weekend:

--My 18 y.o. son is looking to leave the nest (sob! :crying:) and go away to college next year. Early Sat. afternoon we visited University of California Santa Barbara, which has a freaking gorgeous campus, right on the ocean, like a little French village. Late afternoon we walked around UCLA, which was big and overwhelming, but my son was okay with that.
--Spent Saturday night in an AirBnb in Inglewood. Host was super nice and let us park our car there all day Sunday (so we could take an Uber to the game.) The immediate neighborhood seemed relatively nice and quiet. (Our place got good reviews.)
--Tupac and Dr. Dre are right.... "Inglewood always up to no good." Overall, definitely had a sketchy vibe. One guy in a beat up old sports car just motored right around us and through a stop sign. And later this woman pulled up next to me at an intersection, and I looked over and thought, "Damn she looks high or strung out." And then she just plowed through the red light like she didn't give a shit.
--Getting an Uber to "near the stadium" was super easy, they dropped us off at the Sizzler just a couple blocks north of the Forum. Getting an Uber after the game was more difficult, so we just ended up walking all the way back to our Airbnb, about a 45 minute walk, not too bad.
--Couldn't believe how easy it was to get into the stadium. I've been burned a couple times before with long lines at the Coliseum, so maybe I overcorrected. But we just breezed through security, no big deal at all, we ended up being almost an hour early.
--SoFi was what I expected-- gorgeous. Huge and clean and ultra-modern. Everything about the game day experience was superior to the Coliseum. Better food, wide open concourses, no lines for anything, everything neat and well designed and perfectly clean. Still... a small part of me almost missed the grunginess. The Coliseum was kinda like football itself-- lots of smelly, dirty, overweight guys cramping your personal space :laugh1:
--Forty three freakin' bucks for a flimsy T-shirt? Okay....
--Detorit fans were awesome, and made a surprisingly strong showing (maybe 8 to 10 percent of attendees). They all seemed cool and kinda self-effacing, like, "Yeah, I'm a hopeless Detroit fan, I've got no choice about it." Good sense of humor too-- one guy was dressed up as the Cowardly Lion. One couple had matching T-shirts with horizontal lines across the chest, with the caption: "Detroit Lines." The old fart sitting behind me (okay older than me anyway) was a sad sack Lions fan who was convinced they were gonna lose. He'd spent the previous night in Vegas, so all he cared about was covering the point spread. Needless to say, no trash talking from Detroit fans whatsoever.
--During pre-game warmups, I heard a nice round of applause for Michael Brockers. I leaned over to my wife and said, "I wonder if they'll applaud for Goff." Immediately a female Detroit fan whipped her head around and said to me, "You can take Goff back, we don't want him." Ouch! I somehow missed the announcement for Goff... I suspect he got a warm reception, though.
--Never was a fan of the "Whose House" chant, but in majestic SoFi it sure seems more appropriate than at the dumpy Coliseum. Love the "Thirrrrrddddd DOOOWWWWNNNN!! announcement. And the "Second and LOOOOOONNNNGGGG!" announcement was snarky and kinda funny.
--Sound system was fantastic, just like everything else. Shout out to @Selassie... the beat from "I Got Five On It" got me pumped up.
--Overall the crowd wasn't as loud as I thought it would be. Stadium was only about 85% full, I'd guess. And I think everyone kinda assumed we'd crush Detroit and was subdued because of how close it was. Crowd didn't get really loud until late in the 4th quarter.
--The "murmuring" sound from the crowd was amusing after the second fake punt. A whole stadium full of people turned to each other and said, "Can you believe they got away with it AGAIN?.... what the Hell?... how could we not see that coming?" Made for a really weird sound for about 30 seconds, everyone muttering in surprised annoyance.
--Game notes: Kenny Young had a nice sack on a key third down, and also a great run stop on fourth down. Sorry to see him go. #11 on Detroit is a tough SOB, he had a great game. The PI penalty on third and long in the first quarter was a key play... Rams were down 13-3, and without that PI, Detroit might have actually made a run at it. In person, you can really appreciate the slow developing deep routes... two of the deep throws to Kupp were just beautiful.
--Overall, had a fantastic time. My daughter doesn't even know the rules of football, she was just along to be a good sport, saying: "Hey, this is Dad's day." Really glad we won this thing-- I was expecting we'd just be high-fiving during a Rams blowout win, but I'm thankful the Rams pulled it out.

I'll post some pics in a couple minutes...

Cheers, to da Ramily

The XXXIVwin family
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Overcast and not too hot

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Realistic Trade Targets

I posted this on Reddit, thought I'd repost here.

Been seeing a lot of Madden GMs on Rams twitter lately so I wanted to lay out some possible realistic targets.

Per Rapaport, Rams had about $160k of cap space pre-Havenstein restructure. Havenstein cleared up about $3m and trading Kenny Young cleared up $1.13m per @ Spotrac twitter.

I will be operating under the assumption the trade target will cost around $4-5m. This could always move around, but that's where we are at currently.
I am also focusing on positions we recently lost (Funk, Mundt) and needs (secondary). I tried to get LB numbers, but couldn't find anything definitive. Extra secondary can help move Rapp into the box. Mark Barron 2.0.

NOTE: THESE NUMBERS CAN CHANGE WITH EACH GAME CHECK. I am just going off of Spotrac's 10/20 tweets. I do not know if he was tweeting under the assumption of being traded that day, or at the deadline.

RB:
Marlon Mack. New team: $555k. Next year: $0. Personal opinion? I'd rather go defense, but what the heck it's only $555k.
View: Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/spotrac/status/1451192374357491721?s=20



TE:
Hayden Hurst. New team: $1.1m. Next year: $0. Personal opinion? Pass catcher, Mundt locked it down blocking. More pressing positional needs.
View: Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/spotrac/status/1450976158900686851?s=20



CB:
Joe Haden. New team: $3.8m. Next year: $0. Personal opinion? Not world shifting but it's fine.
View: Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/spotrac/status/1450918044096679940?s=20



Kyle Fuller. New team: $5.2m. Next year: $0. Personal opinion? Would be nice, but on the higher $ end.
View: Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/spotrac/status/1450924286236049409?s=20



Xavien Howard. (Couldn't find definitive numbers. This is me guessing. $1.4m signing. Half of the remaining.) New team: $6.8. Can probably stop right there. Too expensive.

S:
Marcus Maye. New team: $5.9m. Next year: $0. Personal opinion? Ah the man of the hour. The one all Rams fans want. This would be the hardest to make the money work. The two realistic ways I see are losing a contributor (no thanks) or restructuring/extending Stafford. If they can do that, I'm all for it.
View: Login to view embedded media View: https://twitter.com/spotrac/status/1450921130517225475?s=20



Hopefully this can help clear up some things. Again, had no data on LBs.

Rams Coaching- Tha Pain Train not ending

Was just thinking about this, the former coordinators/coaches pilfered from us by other teams as head coaches that fall under the McVay tree.

Our record and theirs below:
Bengals 5-2
Chargers 4-2
Packers 6-1 multiple playoffs
Rams 6-1 Super Bowl and multiple playoffs

Even though its early in the season, that's extremely high rate of success right there. We are seemingly stuck on the Pain Train of losing coaches, maybe now at an even more accelerated rate, if that's possible.

I am very impressed with McVay in his ability to find coaches who fit and excel, but he is going to soon need to have a separate scouting team just for coach replacement soon.

Who knew this level of success would lead to more frustration? Its a wonderful problem to have, but his success only seems to make his job harder, but I am so glad to be around for the ride!

State of the Seahawks

What do you think about the Seahawks right now?

Buyers or sellers at the trade deadline?

At 2-5 they can get back into the mix… The 7th NFC playoff team is 3-3 this moment.

I know, damn. These guys won’t be going away.

Russell Wilson can return is week 10… with their bye conveniently week 9.

This week they are home vs Jacksonville. That’s not a guaranteed win… but let’s assume they are 3-5.

The rest of their schedule looks like this;

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Some fans are restless and calling for a rebuild:


More chatter about trading Wilson.

RIP Mort Saul ...

The comic whose pioneering style paved the way for such boundary-breaking comedians as Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor and George Carlin, died Tuesday at his home in Mill Valley, CA. He was 94. One of the originals when it came to applying social commentary to his stand-up act and using early TV media for skewering politicians and others in a harsh but clean presentation.

Sounds of the game from the clinching plays (wtf is up with Detroit's center?)

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Short little sounds of the game clip from the end of the game including the second interception. On the play check out how the center snaps the ball when Goff is looking to his left. That happened at least once earlier in the game, I remember Sanchez mentioning it, and of course it also happened against the Brears when it bounced off Goff into the defenders arms. Such a weird issue to have happen repeatedly.

Medical Marijuana

Today I got my card approved In Missouri for use of medical marijuana.

I'm excited to get into the dispensary tomorrow. I've been getting stuff for a while. But it's always been just kinda getting what I get.

I'm a big Distillate fan as well as gummies.

I like sativa or hybrid. I prefer to get upbeat.

I'm looking for recommendations for pain. Something that won't get me really high, but will help with pain.

I enjoy the high, but there as a working adult and father, there are times obviously that I can't be high as fuck. Lol

Any ideas? Or what do u like?

"Find me a right tackle that's playing as good as him so far..."

Before the season began, I posted that I expected Rob Havenstein to have a Pro Bowl like season. Some here thought he was 1. Overpaid 2. Easily replaced 3. A liability of some sort.

Apparently, Sean sees it the way I do. D'Marco even commented on the two point conversion about how he wasn't supposed to be able to hook the end from where he start.

Props to Big Rob. Stay healthy, my man.

  • Article Article
Los Angeles Rams: 5 NFL Trade Options Ahead of the Deadline

Downtown Rams

Los Angeles Rams: 5 NFL Trade Options Ahead of the Deadline​

by Blaine Grisak October 26, 2021 0 comment
The Los Angeles Rams traded away Kenny Young and a 2024 7th round pick to the Denver Broncos in exchange for a 2024 6th round pick. It’s a move that doesn’t make a lot of sense for a few reasons. For starters, the Rams are already very thin at the linebacker position. Young had been arguably the team’s best linebacker this season and led the defense in tackles for loss. Secondly, the Rams traded away Young for the equivalent of nothing. A 2024 6th round pick doesn’t move the needle.
However, what makes this move interesting is that it’s paired with another move that the Rams made on Saturday. Early on Saturday, the Rams restructured Rob Havenstein’s contract to open up some cap space. By trading Young for pennies at this point in the season, it smells like a “cap move”. The only reason the Rams would be looking to open up cap space at this point in the season would be if another trade were coming.

The move could simply spell more playing time for rookie Ernest Jones. However, for a team looking to win now and already thin at linebacker, it’s a very curious move nonetheless.
A few weeks ago, Sean McVay said that he didn’t anticipate any big moves coming. Les Snead is clearly working the phone lines though and it wouldn’t be a total surprise if another move did happen. Let’s take a look at some potential names.

CB Amani Oruwariye – Detroit Lions​

Two of the recent in-season trades that the Los Angeles Rams have made have had one thing in common – interest pre-draft. When the Rams traded away Marcus Peters, they made sure to get Kenny Young in the deal as well. Young was a player that the Rams liked and met with pre-draft. The same can be said about Austin Corbett in the trade with the Browns in 2019.
Names like Xavien Howard will come up as players to watch for the Rams come the trade deadline. However, Howard will be tough to fit under the cap and the Rams don’t need a top-level cornerback. This is a defense that still has Jalen Ramsey and Darious Williams will return in a few weeks. In reality, the Rams really need depth at the cornerback position to replace David Long.
The Rams and Lions made a few trades this offseason that included Jared Goff and Michael Brockers. These are two team with familiarity in the front offices and good relationships. The Rams met with Amani Oruwariye prior to the 2019 NFL Draft and he was selected in the fifth round by the Detroit Lions.
This season, Oruwariye has started all seven games for the Lions and has three interceptions to go with four passes defended. Oruwariye gives the Rams length at the cornerback spot and someone who can be that number three or number four cornerback this season. With Williams set to hit free agency, Oruwariye could be someone the Rams could develop into a starting role as well. With the Lions in a rebuild, they might be looking for picks.
Trade: Rams give a conditional fourth round pick.

LB Myles Jack – Jacksonville Jaguars​

The Los Angeles Rams gave up Kenny Young without much of a backup plan at the linebacker spot. As it stands, Troy Reeder and Ernest Jones will be in line as the starting linebackers. Young was having a very good season and led the Rams in tackles for loss.
Jack would give the Rams an athletic linebacker who could cover sideline to sideline. The Jaguars linebacker was also apart of a 2018 defense with Jalen Ramsey that was one of the best in the league. Jack is only 26-years old and is under contract for two more seasons. His cap number is $10.5M and $11.25M in those two seasons.
The Rams opted not to pay Cory Littleton two years ago and they don’t like to spend on the linebacker position. Jack might cost too much both financially and in asset for Les Snead’s liking. The Rams have opened up some cap space and would need to find a way to open up more if they were to trade for Jack. These two teams have done deals in the past, specifically with Jalen Ramsey. Could another deal be a possibility?
Trade: Rams give 2022 2nd and 2023 5th round picks

S Marcus Maye – New York Jets​

The New York Jets are 1-6 and are paying their starting safety on the franchise tag. At this point in the season, it doesn’t make a lot of sense for Maye to play for the Jets or for the Jets to keep Maye. The Los Angeles Rams meanwhile could use a starting veteran safety. Jordan Fuller hasn’t played at a high level like some expected and Taylor Rapp is a liability in coverage.
Maye allowed an 80.4 passer rating last season and had two interceptions. Think Jamaal Adams who can actually cover. Again, the Rams would likely need to find a way to make it work with the cap. Another restructure somewhere on the roster would need to take place. However, Maye would give the defense a huge boost.
Trade: Rams give 2022 3rd Round pick

WR Odell Beckham Jr. – Cleveland Browns​

SomeLos Angeles Rams fans might not like this move simply because of the name. ‘Odell Beckham Jr. is a head case and will be a distraction.’ That might be, however, the same could be said about Jalen Ramsey in Jacksonville. The fact of the matter is, players like playing in Los Angeles and the Rams do a very good job of keeping their players happy.
Last week, the Arizona Cardinals traded for Zach Ertz. Ertz scored his first touchdown on Sunday with the Cardinals on an offense that already looked unstoppable. The Rams might feel some pressure to make an offensive move to keep up with Arizona.
Cooper Kupp is having a great season and Robert Woods seems to finally be getting in sync with Matthew Stafford. Van Jefferson is also playing well and DeSean Jackson has performed when his number has been called on. However, while Jefferson is playing well, there’s no doubt that Beckham would provide an immediate boost to the Rams receiving corps. He may not be the same receiver he was with the New York Giants, but the fit in Cleveland also never seemed to be right.
The Rams have had interest in Beckham Jr. in the past as they almost traded for him when he was with the New York Giants. With him out of favor in Cleveland, and the Browns looking to get Donovan Peoples-Jones and Anthony Schwartz more involved, a move isn’t totally out of the question.
Trade: Rams give 2022 3rd round pick and conditional 2023 5th round pick

CB AJ Terrell – Atlanta Falcons​

The Atlanta Falcons sit at 2-4 right now with not a lot of direction on either side of the football. With Matt Ryan under center, they’re playing to win and not doing a very good job at it. This is a team that needs to blow it up and start their rebuild.
Los Angeles Rams general manager Les Snead used to work with the Falcons, and could still have relationships within the organization.
Last season, despite a down year, Raheem Morris had the Falcons playing good defense, specifically in the secondary. Terrell is one of only a few cornerbacks to allow fewer than 100 yards in coverage and is the only cornerback with 50+ man coverage snaps without allowing a catch.
If Terrell wasn’t playing well right now, this trade might be more likely. It would be very similar to the Austin Corbett trade. However, the 2020 first round pick is healthy and playing up to his draft status. Morris has familiarity with Terrell which is why this move would make sense for the Rams. However, with the Falcons in a rebuild, they might be looking to keep all of the young talent they can. Contrarily, they could look to sell and accumulate draft picks.
Trade: Rams give 2022 3rd, 2022 5th, and conditional 2023 3rd round round pick

CB Darren Hall – Atlanta Falcons

I’m throwing in a sixth just as an honorable mention. The Rams may not be able to get Terrell, but Darren Hall might be a little more manageable. The Falcons drafted Hall in the fourth round of the draft in April. However, he was a player that the Rams had interest in and met with before the draft.
Hall doesn’t have a lot of experience as he’s played just 18 snaps. However, David Long looks to be out of favor with the Rams coaching staff. Hall would give the Rams some depth and a player they can develop. It wouldn’t be a splashy move, but it would bring in a player that would give the Rams much needed depth where they need it.
Trade: Rams give 2022 5th and conditional 2023 7th




About Post Author​


Blaine Grisak

Administrator
Blaine Grisak is the managing editor of Downtown Rams. Blaine brings a realistic perspective to all of his Rams coverage. He’s been a Rams fan for 20 years and resides in Pennsylvania. His favorite player is Kurt Warner. You can follow him on Twitter at @bgrisakDTR
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  • Poll Poll
SURVIVOR: When to pick the Lions?

Next Likely Lions Win

  • vs. Igg;es

    Votes: 15 50.0%
  • vs. Steelers/ Stillers

    Votes: 1 3.3%
  • vs. Da Bears

    Votes: 6 20.0%
  • vs. the Broncos

    Votes: 1 3.3%
  • vs. the Dirty Birds

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I aint tellin' you shyte!

    Votes: 7 23.3%

The Lions played with some heart against us and succeeded with 3 trick plays, but lost a close one. I have one strike in the game and the next one eliminates me. I can't believe that the Lions will go 0-17 and so who will they beat? I think this week is a good, yet risky game tp pick the Lions to win. There are a few other candidates for a possible win, and which would you pick?
Eagles @ Lions
Lions @ Steelers
Bears @ Lions
Lions @ Broncos
Lions @ Falcons

Or, would you keep picking sure thing wins? Help a bruthah out, I wanna kick your donkey!

PREGAME Up Next - Week 8 - Rams at Texans

Looks like Tyrod Taylor could be back.


Tyrod Taylor will return to practice on Wednesday, head coach David Culley announced. Culley added that Taylor “was our starting quarterback, [so] when he’s healthy, he’ll be our starting quarterback,” (Twitter link via Adam Schefter of ESPN.com).

Taylor has been on IR ever since his Week 2 hamstring injury. Davis Mills has been serving as the starter ever since, but the results haven’t been great. His best performance came against the Patriots as he completed 21 of 29 passes for 312 yards, three touchdowns, and no interceptions. The Pats went on to win 25-22 and the Texans went on to drop their next two games to the Colts and Cardinals.

Following Sunday’s loss to Arizona, the Texans are 1-6 and in serious need of a spark. Taylor could help to some extent, but it remains to be seen if he’ll be able to go against the Rams this week.

The Discovery, Mystery and Controversy of the Original Horns



The Discovery, Mystery and Controversy of the Original Horns​

It might be a prototype for the first helmet bearing an NFL logo. It might not. A memorabilia collector has what he believes could be a historic artifact. Our writer goes on a journey to find out.
GREG BISHOP

Mr. H is tall, bald, white and 45 years old. He is personable, soft-spoken and curious. He lives comfortably, with his girlfriend, mostly in central California. His wealth derives from collecting: watches and diamonds, jewelry and art, gold and silver and coins. He travels the state visiting jewelry stores, secondhand stores and antique stores, looking for rare finds or buying whole estates. The vast majority of his purchases hold no historical significance. They are, as he puts it, “someone else’s treasures.”

On a typical day in an atypical life, Mr. H and his partners will spend between $10,000 and $50,000. He describes his group as “volume buyers” who rely on sources and their tips. Sometimes, he will shell out much more, deep into the millions, landing hundreds of gold coins, rare Impressionist paintings, or sport model vintage Rolexes from the 1960s—“anything, really, that’s of exceptional quality or value,” he says. And, though rarely, sometimes his business intersects with sports.

In another lifetime, Mr. H ran a baseball card shop. He still follows the market, tracking the latest boom, and has netted a Babe Ruth rookie card and the coveted 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle. Then there's his more recent discovery, from a purchase in Palm Springs, Calif., Mr. H and his partners bought several items that once belonged to Fred Gehrke, the late NFL running back and executive who holds a special place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, where he occupies a wing that’s home to few members. In that sale, Mr. H discovered an artifact that might be of vast historical significance ... or not.

dCOVramsHELMET_V


Kohjiro Kinno/Sports Illustrated
Mr. H does not want to be identified in this story, nor do his friends; all maintain they’re not relevant to the narrative. That’s debatable—because of what they found in Palm Springs, which they paid roughly $40,000 for last year. “I didn’t realize how important what I bought [could be],” Mr. H says.

Hence the relevance, I told him, as we embarked on a reporting journey that was long, perplexing and just plain weird. He laughed, not budging. His insistence on anonymity marked the first unexpected twist in a story that unspooled more like a detective caper, a tale about a football helmet, a stroke of marketing genius and the man who, 75 years ago, was responsible for both.

THE IMPLICATIONS​

The dealer who tipped the buyers to the items hosted them at an office in Palm Springs. Mr. H figured he would be shown the usual assortment of someone else’s treasures. When this dealer walked into that office, he paraded in an array of sports-centric items: cleats with wooden blocks screwed onto the bottom to serve as spikes; framed, handwritten letters from football luminaries like commissioner Pete Rozelle; a championship ring. They seemed to speak to a person who valued history and his place in it. The buyers started to wonder: Who was this Gehrke, anyway?

The answer started with what the dealer held in his hands—an unpolished, unfinished and unusual item that, at first glance, looked more like someone else’s junk. It was an old Rams football helmet covered in markings, lines scribbled everywhere like hieroglyphic writings on the wall of an ancient cave. This particular helmet, he told the buyers, had been designed, created and painted by Gehrke.

Fred Gehrke, in his office during the 1970s


Gehrke, in his office during the 1970s.
Lyn Alweis/The Denver Post/Getty Images

Mr. H stepped outside and tapped relevant terms into a search engine on his phone. The sell, wild as it sounded, seemed like it could be true. The dealer pointed out the horns that had been drawn on the helmet; look closely and they could see multiple revisions, lines of varying length visible beneath several coats of chipped paint.

Seeking informed opinions from the sports world, Mr. H first called one partner who happened to love the Rams. Buy it, the partner said. Mr. H then called Rick Mirigian, a boxing manager/promoter for top junior welterweight Jose Ramirez, among others. A collector calling a boxing manager to affirm the value of an estate sale? Another ridiculous twist. But Mirigian conducted his own search and concurred with the Rams-fan consultant.

Thus began an obsession for all involved. So, too, began my foray into the realm of amateur authentication. Mirigian spent hours studying pictures of the helmet, trying to ascertain whether they had stumbled upon what he believed might be the prototype for the first logoed helmet in NFL history. “Like a rare Picasso or Rembrandt had been unearthed or something,” he says.

His promotional instincts kicked in. He wondered: If true, what was it worth? To the Rams? A museum? The NFL?
Mirigian started considering logos and how they had changed sports, leading to merchandise—so, so, so much merchandise, millions of hats and T-shirts and coffee cups sold, billions of dollars banked. Logos would come to define iconic franchises. They would connect communities. They would become an integral part of the sports landscape. Think: Cowboys star, Lakers basketball, Yankees interlocking “NY.” Also: Rams horns.
Mirigian couldn’t sleep, possibilities unspooling in his head like complex math equations. To him, everything lined up. He told Mr. H, “This may be way more important than you think.” Mirigian reminded his friend that the next Super Bowl, LVI, will be held at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. He dreamed of displaying their discovery.

THE PROMOTER​

I knew Mirigian from the nothing-like-it world of boxing, where even the characters who abound found him hilarious and a tad extreme. Whenever we connect, my wife laughs—“Oh, that guy called again.” That’s because, inevitably, when I ask Rick how he’s doing, he will launch into one rant or another on disastrous promotions, dizzying negotiations, bogus contracts, shady rivals, anxiety, or number of days gone by without sleep.

Wary but intrigued, I jumped into the deep end of the speculation pool. Gehrke was the artist who designed the prototype, advancing the evolution of football helmets more than any person or company since they were invented.
Additional research helped explain the potential holy-s--- nature of their find, starting with the NFL, a league that generated $12.2 billion in revenue last year. The logo directly impacted massive television contracts and corporate sponsorship, along with licensing deals for the league and its individual teams. The worth of the logos baked into those billions seemed several levels beyond significant. I began to buy Mirigian’s sell: The helmet locked away in Mr. H’s safe could have changed not just football but all sports.

THE SELLER?​

It was one thing for this group to believe they had accidentally obtained a substantial piece of NFL history. It was another thing entirely to answer the question we all desperately wanted clarity on: Were they right?
The helmet wasn’t like a baseball card, where condition mattered and a grade would determine value. Since few prototypes existed—perhaps only one, even—all that counted was whether this was that.

They asked the dealer to reach out to Jean Gehrke, Fred’s second wife. They wanted confirmations, a signature, photos of Fred working on his prototype that could be used for comparison.
A week passed. Then two. Then three. With no reason to rush, none of the buyers panicked. They knew that Jean was in her 80s, that everyone was living through a pandemic.
They could wait, and while they did, they came to a consensus: They did not plan to auction the helmet to the highest bidder. Instead, they desired to tell the broader story of how merchandise came to define sports. They believed their helmet told that story through its perfect imperfections, all the markings, the starts and stops of a logo taking shape. This was the football equivalent of Albert Einstein’s notes on the theory of relativity, an idea—one that would change the world—at the moment of conception.

THE SKEPTIC​

My initial reaction mixed awe with doubt. I bought Mirigian’s central thesis—what they believed was plausible, even with implausible elements. Part of me, though, wondered if the tale was fantastical, grounded in a misguided premise, the desire to want the story to be true. I conveyed that sentiment to Mirigian. He said that verifying the helmet would “not be a big headache.” He had contacts, after all—a favorite line of his. And, to be fair, those contacts had always proven helpful previously. We settled on a compromise: I would do some digging.

A colleague helped me find a number for Jean Gerhke, who still lives in Palm Springs. I left a message. Then another. I sent a few emails but initially had the wrong address. After about a week, she called back. Her demeanor was pleasant, her vibe chatty. We briefly discussed the buyers’ find, and she raised an important, potentially damaging point at the outset.
Fred had actually designed two helmets, she said; one before he met her, the actual prototype for what would become the versions with logos we see today; and another, smaller version, one he fashioned later, in the 1970s, for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
I asked if she knew which helmet they had purchased. “I don’t,” she answered.
Jean filled in what she could. She did not know the buyers—Jean had sold everything to Paul Welch, proprietor of Coachella Valley Jewelry and Loan, a pawn shop in nearby Palm Desert, who then sold it to Mr. H and his partners. She was not in regular contact with Fred’s children from a previous marriage. “I just sold a lot of Fred’s stuff,” she said. “I really can’t say. But I’m the only one that had anything of Fred’s, except I did give his children a lot of the Rams stuff.”

Her answer was both helpful and confusing. The fact that she had sold his “stuff” aligned with the buyers’ story. The fact that she had that stuff spoke to her relationship with Fred, their bond. The most likely person to have possessed a prototype two decades after his death was Jean. And yet, this was a Rams helmet. Perhaps one of the children had the prototype. I wrote in my notes: seems like she knows more than she’s saying.
I wanted to know more. So I asked her, “Tell me about Fred.”

THE RUNNING BACK​

Fred met Jean at Northrop Aviation, an American aircraft manufacturer, in the 1960s, years after retiring from football. He worked as a draftsman, atechnical illustrator,” and, eventually, he would oversee the photo lab, the print shop and the art department. She was early into her career, assisting at the drafting table. He was the kindest, gentlest person she had ever met. Despite 40 years of marriage, Jean says she never saw Fred angry. He didn’t brag. Nor did he traffic in nostalgia, or tell the same story over and over, even though a slice of NFL history—one that would make a lot of people rich—began with him. He would tell Jean that if he “died tomorrow,” he had “lived a full, fantastic, wonderful life; every day a pleasure, even work.”

“It made me mad,” she says, laughing. “He was just so damn happy all the time.”
The happy man was many things: father, husband, running back, broadcaster, general manager—and, through it all, at his core, an innovator, creator, artist. Fred liked to joke about how he played 10 seasons in pro football and his only chance to “end up in the Hall of Fame would be from my darn artwork.”
Over time and with much prodding, she pried details from Fred to piece together his remarkable life. He had grown up in Salt Lake City, where he would sneak into Utes football games and build model airplanes for fun. Even then, the duality that defined his life was prominent. He graduated with a degree in art from Utah in 1939, where he made all-conference, playing running back and cornerback, returning punts and kickoffs. He also set school records for the javelin toss and won three straight conference diving titles.
He played for the Cleveland/Los Angeles Rams, the San Francisco 49ers and the Chicago Cardinals from 1940 to ’50. Mostly. World War II paused his career after only one season. Gehrke wanted to fight in the war but failed his physical. But he still wished to contribute, so he started with Northrop in the engineering department. He kept in shape by playing for lower-level teams—the L.A. Bulldogs, L.A. Wildcats and the Hollywood Bears—which the NFL allowed. When the war ended, he returned to the Rams.

His first season back, in ’45, Gehrke beat out two Heisman Trophy winners (Tom Harmon and Les Horvath) for the starting tailback gig, then led the league in yards per rush (6.3) and punt-return average (15.0). Pro Football Illustrated named him first-team All-Pro. The Rams lost only once that season and captured the NFL title with a victory over Washington.
Gehrke retired a few seasons later, at 31, then moved into the broadcast booth. He later shifted into personnel, serving as the Broncos’ general manager from 1977 through ’81. Eventually, he went back to Northrop, where he met Jean and helped design the P-61 Black Widow, the first U.S. warplane that could operate at night. He remained in football, though, moonlighting as a broadcast analyst for college games every weekend.
He died in 2002, at age 83, but not before being elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. His induction was rare, like his life, in that Gehrke did not reach pro football immortality for how he played, analyzed, or drafted. He reached that immortality through his art.

THE ARTIST​

From the day that Jean met Fred, she could see that he defined himself less by one part of his life—football—and more by the totality of his existence. In fact, creating was the calling closest to his soul. He loved woodworking and fashioned for her a coffee table, a chest side table and a breakfast nook.

By then, he had already created a version of the facemask—and during his career. This happened in 1946. Gehrke would later tell several reporters that he took a handoff and shot through the line, cruising down field until defenders not only caught him but broke his nose. Unable to slow the bleeding, Gehrke had to come out. In the next game, defenders re-broke that nose. Same thing in the next game, according to his interviews.
The next offseason, Gehrke decided he was done with broken beaks. He transformed a chunk of clay into the shape of half a human skull. He brought the molding to Northrop and asked the machinists who ran the power-stamping machines to mold aluminum to the clay. They did, and this football Frankenstein creation covered his forehead and his nose and rested on the cheekbones. But Gehrke wasn’t done. His grandfather worked as a shoemaker, and Gehrke asked if he could cover the contraption in leather and attach it to a helmet.
Gehrke played the next season with a facemask, more proof of his status as football’s great architect. His Twitter handle might have been @theRBinventor. He would later say that the initial version obstructed his vision. But, bonus: no more broken noses.

On his first day in personnel with the Broncos, Gehrke asked to tour the offices to study their design. He did not like what he saw. He sometimes told one story about meeting with Gerald Phipps, then owner of their dilapidated digs. When Gehrke rose to greet his boss, his head collided with the ceiling.
Denver had the right man for an office makeover. Gehrke fixed the leaky plumbing in the dressing room, added working shower heads (only two were functional) and found space for a full-size practice field (after realizing the version he inherited topped out at about 80 yards). That he performed all the repair work while working as director of player personnel marked another startling twist that spoke to life in the pre-logo NFL. More importantly, he asked for these tasks, because he knew he could improve on existing designs, just like he had years earlier, with the helmet.
Gehrke hired coach Red Miller, acquired quarterback Craig Morton and went to Super Bowl XII, where the Broncos lost to the Cowboys. Gehrke helped design the rings given out to commemorate their conference championship, reinforcing his duality once more.
As he ascended from exec to GM to vice president, Gehrke also tutored punters and kickers; forever efficient, the ultimate multitasker. At one point, he realized the kickers had no real way to practice on the sidelines. He called over the equipment manager and asked for netting, which he fashioned onto aluminum pipes. The first kicking net was born in that moment of inventive absurdity. Gehrke obtained a patent he held until the rights expired.

In every football stadium, at every level of the sport, kickers warm up by blasting attempts into nets that are stationed on the sideline. They also jog onto fields wearing facemasks on their helmets. And those creations, both of which changed football and long ago became ubiquitous, would comprise only a small portion of his legacy, two remarkable footnotes to his greatest impact—what the buyers believed they had discovered in Palm Springs.

THE DA VINCI OF FOOTBALL HELMETS​

They believed they had a prototype. I wanted to believe them. Jean Gehrke wasn’t sure. Looking for consensus, of any sort, I started looking into the helmet itself. Wherever this prototype actually was, no one disputed how it came to be.
The path to their discovery—maybe—began in a garage in late 1947 or ’48 (accounts differ as to exactly when). Gehrke played for an owner, Dan Reeves, who was considered a visionary in his own right. Reeves is often cited as the first person to move an NFL team west of the Rocky Mountains (’46), the first to hire Black employees (also ’46) and the first to televise games (’51).
Gehrke told reporters that his owner cared more than his counterparts about his team’s appearance. That got the running back to thinking. Couldn’t the helmets, specifically how they looked, be easily improved? Certain that they could, Gehrke began sketching with pens and pencils long before he sat down in that garage. After one practice the previous season, he showed his favorite draft to his coach, Bob Snyder, who, like all editors, wanted something more. Snyder told Gehrke that he could not visualize the drawing on their headgear, so he added, “Paint it on a helmet.”

Gehrke did, inside that garage. His story of that afternoon remained remarkably consistent over the years. He took a brown, leather helmet and first painted it blue. He then rendered, freehand, an outline of ram horns, scribbled in gold paint. The gold color, Gehrke often lamented, would later be changed to white, because television executives liked that hue better. Gehrke considered the blue-and-gold original more aesthetically pleasing. Reeves agreed, signing off on the design and checking with the NFL about any legal issues. There were none.
Rams players pose in the first helmet with a logo painted on it


Rams players modeled the first painted helmets.
Denver Post/Getty Images (middle); Bettmann Archive/Getty Images (2)
Snyder told Gehrke to paint 75 helmets exactly that same way, and Gehrke often told reporters that he did, decorating them all by hand. He received $1 per helmet for his toiling and nothing for two seasons of touch-ups. But that debut, in the first game of the next season, was worth more than money. No team had ever run onto a pro football field that way, with a symbol painted on the equipment atop their heads. The crowd showered the Rams with a standing ovation that lasted for five minutes. It seemed to understand the history.

By ’49, the sporting goods company Riddell had incorporated Gehrke’s design in their helmets, by baking the horns into the plastic shell. The Colts would soon adapt a logoed version of their headgear—the famous horseshoe. Before long, every team in the NFL except the Browns and Steelers had slapped logos onto helmets, and every team affixed them to everything else, from coffee mugs to keychains to temporary tattoos, all available, for the right price. Gehrke likely had no idea then just how much one afternoon in his garage would change pro football. He certainly could never have envisioned where the helmet—maybe—would end up.

THE EVOLUTION​

The more that Mr. H and his friends researched Gehrke and his art, the more they felt like they had come to know the man. Same for me. We sent old pictures back and forth, marveling at the history Gehrke kept inside his office, the volume of what he had saved. It seemed like he knew, at minimum, that his life could later help to tell a larger story, the larger story, of how the NFL became a billion-dollar behemoth.
We read—and reread—a Sports Illustrated magazine piece on Gehrke from 1994. Perfect headline: “Rembrandt of the Rams.” Gehrke told author Mark Mandernach that he stored brushes near cans of blue and gold paint inside his locker for those touch-ups. The piece, written almost 50 years after his playing career concluded, placed Gehrke in his proper historical context. He had made the Hall for his artistic and inventive contributions rather than anything he ever did on a football field, just as he predicted. Gehrke would become the first recipient of the Daniel F. Reeves Memorial Pioneer Award. The symmetry was ideal, the honor named after his owner from those head-bumping-ceiling days.

The story also mentioned an exhibit that commemorated Gehrke’s lasting impact on his sport. That caught my attention. Was the prototype already in Canton, Ohio? Had we spent a few months chasing the wrong ghost?
I reached out to the Hall. A week went by. Then another. Then I heard from Jason Aikens, their collections curator. I stared at the bearded face on his LinkedIn profile while I waited for his call. I hoped he could provide the elusive clarity we sought. But he didn’t seem that fascinated, and I wondered if he received similar requests all the time. This re-elevated my dwindling skepticism.

I took him through what Jean had said about two helmets of differing sizes painted decades apart. I told him about the picture she had taken in the 1970s that shows Fred painting the smaller version and signing the inside, just like the original prototype.
Aikens said that he would look into everything the Hall had related to Gehrke. But before we hung up, I asked for a brief history on helmets, in order to better understand the prototype’s historical significance. Aikens laughed, noting that he had grown up as a Rams fan. He loved the horns, loved the logo. And now, right at that moment, he began to explain.

Fans of helmets will not find a consensus on the first one. But many point to Admiral Joseph Reeves, who, as legend has it, had taken so many blows to the head that a doctor told him even one more wallop could give him “instant insanity.”
The evolution started around then.
1900s: soft, leather, “optional” skull caps were donned by players who chose to wear them.
1920s: hardened leather versions made their debut.
1930s: that same version received an upgrade, with harder, thicker leather.
1939: Riddel invented the first plastic, non-logoed iteration.
1940s: Helmet met chin strap.
1941: Production of plastic versions dropped, due to scarcity of material necessary for the U.S. war effort.
1943: The NFL began requiring all players to wear headgear during games. Soon after: plastic helmet manufacturing resumed, only to be halted, when those helmets quickly shattered into pieces and the NFL banned them once more. Soon after that: The padded plastic helmet was rolled out.

1946: Gehrke invented his version of the facemask.
He eventually found his original drawing and sent it to Snyder, his old coach. Snyder had it framed and hung the diagram in his home office. Someone reportedly offered him $10,000 for it, and that wasn’t even the prototype, just the initial sketch of it, the offer now half a century old. If the buyers had the real thing, Aikens believed they had a vital piece of football history.
I told him I planned to see the helmet myself in a few weeks. He told me to look for markings on the inside and what he called “wear patterns” from in-game use. The model that Gehrke painted in the 70s would not have either.
Before we hung up, I had to ask: Is it possible?
His response echoed my own thoughts.
“I don’t know.”

THE PHONE CALL, PART I​

Months after our initial correspondence, while I was on a fishing trip in the Louisiana bayou back in April, my phone buzzed during a crawfish boil. It was Jean Gehrke. She left a message and called back. And called back. And called back. Sensing elevated alarm, I returned the call.

This time, her tone was different. She sounded distressed. She also said that she now believed that the prototype was already in the Hall of Fame, insisting the buyers had the 1970s version.
I was confused. Was she right? And, if she was wrong, was this story causing her undue stress? I wrote down: seems like sellers’ remorse but pursue.
I knew then what was necessary: I had to go see this artifact for myself.

THE VISIT​

The temporary home to the helmet that had sparked a monthslong debate was a ninth-floor condominium in Westwood, Calif. Mr. H stays there when he’s in Los Angeles, the glittery landscape stretching for miles beyond his windows. “I haven’t even unwrapped this yet,” he says, as he carefully removes the bubble wrap that had been taped over a glass display. He then unscrews the helmet from its mount and places it on the glass kitchen table. Tiny pieces fall away, NFL history—maybe—in the form of leather crumbs from the 1940s.
Finally, there it was. The holy grail—or not. I followed Aikens’s instructions. I looked inside, and it took less than five seconds to find Gehrke’s signature. There also appeared to be “wear patterns” and something else, horns inside of horns, like sketches, as if Gehrke had tried out various sizes before settling on the version that he painted. The headgear also, as Mr. H pointed out, would have fit atop his head. There was nothing “mini” about it.

It sure looked like the prototype, to my untrained eye, as Mr. H continued to build his case. He showed off the rest of the estate: personal correspondence with football notables like Jim Thorpe and Otto Graham; artwork made for George Halas, fashioned from 290 pieces of glass; leather helmets believed to be more than a century old; a coin from the 1976 Hall of Fame game; the Broncos conference championship ring that Gehrke had helped design; old driver’s licenses that belonged to Gehrke. The face of that running back/artist momentarily transfixed me. What would Fred Gehrke make of all this?
At minimum, I agreed with Mr. H that Gerhke seemed “like a guy who cared about the evolution of the game.” Why else would he have kept everything he stored away? “I don’t think he knew how people would appreciate memorabilia today,” Mr. H continued. “But he saved stuff for a reason.”
I asked Mr. H what his ideal scenario would look like. “It belongs here,” he said, meaning Los Angeles, with the Rams. “It should be at that brand-new stadium.”
After an hour in the condo, I was fairly certain that Mr. H and his friends were right. Still, that phone call lingered, continuing to sow doubt. I mentioned this to my host. He said he had one more thing to show me, an item that he hoped would put an end to any remaining concerns.

He placed a piece of paper next to the helmet on the table. It had been stamped by a notary, and it read: I, Jean Gehrke, declare this statement to be true that … Fred Gehrke, my husband, designed the original Rams logo helmet. The “Fred Gehrke 1947” signed helmet was the prototype made for the Rams owner …” I stopped reading, scanning downward, toward the signature and the date: 12.11.20. Mr. H even had a picture of her signing it.

CONFIRMATION OF THE CONFIRMATION​

I sent dozens of pictures and videos to Aikens at the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He had done his own homework on Gehrke and the helmet, calling Joe Horrigan, the Hall’s longtime historian and the curator before him.
When we connected in May, Aikens corroborated what that signed paper already seemed to lay out. The Hall did have a helmet from Gehrke, but it was smaller and not worn, just like from the photo Gehrke had taken in his office as he recreated his creation. Horrigan told Aikens that he believed a former executive at the Hall was friends with Gehrke and had commissioned the replica for display. “To me,” Aikens said, “this looks like that helmet.” Aikens also believed the paint on the buyers’ iteration more closely resembled the materials available in the 40s. It was less acrylic, not as strong, or as shiny, not absent blemishes—closer, the curator said, to a watercolor-like version that pro football fans see today.

“I can’t imagine this is fictitious,” Aikens said, meaning the buyers’ claims. “It looks to me like the prototype.”
He suggested another round of vetting, to be safe, telling me I should contact Gehrke’s siblings and children, maybe even one famous grandchild, Brewers star outfielder Christian Yelich. I made a list, leaving out Yelich (who’s a tad busy in the summer) and looked up numbers, Facebook accounts, email addresses. Obituaries from when Gehrke died listed six brothers, three sisters and numerous children and grandchildren. In the ensuing two decades, some of those relatives had also passed. Still, I tried to contact one every day for weeks, circling back whenever reaching a dead end.
Five months later, no one has responded.

CONNECTING, PART I​

Aikens asked for a conversation with the buyers. He said the Hall had a Science of Football display, and he was looking for artifacts to rotate in. He told me to remind Mr. H that all donations were tax deductible. I set up a call with Mirigian, the boxing character who tied all these various entities—SI, the Pro Football Hall of Fame, estate buyers, Gehrke’s remaining relatives, the NFL and its bevy of logoed merchandise—together.

As they went through the same details, at that exact moment, the story shifted. After all the searches, all the research, all the phone calls returned and ignored, the person who would best know whether the buyers had a prototype—beyond Fred Gehrke himself—was now telling a boxing promoter that his wildest sell sure looked like an unfathomable truth.
“I’m not going to tell you about the history of the NFL,” Mirigian said, before launching into just that, the connection to sports business, all those billions.
Aikens could have said, “You had me at prototype.” Instead, he paused briefly, as if he wanted the gravity to sink in. He wanted to display the helmet, which he called “one of the most significant artifacts in NFL history.”

CONNECTING, PART II​

On a Tuesday afternoon in mid-September, Mr. H, Mirigian and friends convene at the Westwood condo. Two days before, the Rams had decimated the Bears on Sunday night, while the players wore new—and much criticized—helmets that feature those famous horns, the design that began with the prototype that Gehrke created more than 70 years ago. Those helmets, of course, had facemasks. The L.A. kickers, naturally, warmed up by booting footballs into nets. They all owed a certain debt to the artist who once donned the same uniform.

The buyers leave early, like really early, riding an elevator downstairs, where Mr. H’s black Cadillac Escalade is parked in the garage. He opens the trunk with a push of a button, and they place the artifact inside, like a newborn strapped into a car seat, then cover it with a blanket.
In Agoura Hills, the Rams business office lobby features a dizzying array of Rams horns. They’re stitched onto throw pillows, emblazoned on helmets, part of the artwork arranged on the walls.
I had wondered how the Rams would react to this piece of history, one I thought tied the franchise in a deeper, more connective way to the larger story of the NFL’s merchandise boom. They already knew. On that previous Sunday, they had played a video inside their palatial stadium, telling the story of their new design, which had been unveiled in 2020, its launch tied directly to the original version and its place in NFL lore.
Kevin Demoff, the franchise’s chief operating officer, noted how the team had collaborated with Nike, seeking innovation that had been encouraged by the NFL. “This new helmet features vibrant colors, a metallic finish and an evolved horn shape,” read the press release. "Our new uniforms preserve the storied legacy of the Rams with the horns at the heart of the design,” Demoff had said then.

Mirigian and the buyers unspool an informal presentation in the lobby. Mirigian asks Demoff if he can relay what they have uncovered to owner Stan Kroenke. Demoff doesn’t hesitate, speeding to his office to grab his phone and sending an immediate text.
A video crew materializes and begins to film. Longtime employees snap pictures. The buyers run through the whole story—of the helmet, of Gehrke’s background, of the wild sequence of events that ties them all together. They show him the Rozelle correspondence, the ring, the drivers licenses, the notarized letter that Jean signed. Mirigian describes Fred as the “MacGyver of the NFL.”
Demoff, who was an art history major at Dartmouth, continues studying the helmet. “Be careful. He might put it on and run out of here,” a colleague whispers.
Kevin Demoff examines would could be the prototype of the first painted Rams helmet


Demoff examining the helmet.
Kohjiro Kinno/Sports Illustrated
When he speaks, he says he loves the contrast inherent in Gehrke’s creation compared to the modern world of pro football, where even art can be made via computer and where imperfections are often derided as incomplete, rather than seen as progress. Nowadays, he notes, it would take two years to push that kind of radical change through the NFL’s lengthy process. “I see work-in-progress revisions,” he says. “That’s what’s so cool. Right now, so much of the NFL is so perfect and so regimented. You can see that this work is someone’s vision, that it’s brainstorming.” Those very blemishes, he argues, make the prototype more desirable, “because it shows the human connection to sports, the personalization of it.”
“It’s so cool,” Demoff says.
Mirigian senses an opening. He mentions the empty display case in the lobby and how perfectly the helmet, their helmet, Gehrke’s helmet, would fit. Would the Rams like to display this piece of team history, no charge? he asks. “It has been an amazing journey, and the [prototype] is finding its way home,” he says. “There’s your headline, Greg.”

THE PHONE CALL, PART II​

With publication imminent, SI reached out to Jean Gehrke once more. She didn’t sound upset, but she wasn’t budging from her convictions, either. She repeatedly insisted the buyers had a “mini” version of the helmet. I asked how so many disparate entities—from SI to the Rams to the Hall—could look at the same thing and come to an opposite conclusion. Was it possible that this was all one big misunderstanding? “No way,” she said. Now even more confused, I stammered out … so there’s no way this is the prototype? “It’s a mini-helmet,” she said. “I may be hurting myself by telling the truth and not getting a nickel out of anything. But this is not a 1947 helmet.”
Later, while I was on paternity leave, an SI colleague asked Jean if she had a preferred resolution. Was it to undo the sale and get the helmet back? She said no, but that since Welch sold the helmet, she should receive additional compensation. Welch says she told him the same thing when he asked Jean if she wanted him to buy the helmet back and return it to her.
I should be honest here. I felt conflicted, both during our last conversation and ever since. Not about the helmet—not really, less than 1% of doubt remained—but more about the story and its potential impact on Jean Gehrke. I believe—then, still—that the buyers have a piece of NFL history. But whether it’s due to confusion, regret or plain old disagreement, Jean says she believes the opposite. My concern centered more on the stress the story was creating for her, along with our role—my role—in that process.
Desperate, I tried pivoting to Fred during our last call—his life, his legacy. Wasn’t that important? Wasn’t having a reminder a good thing? “He was a very talented man,” she said. “[People] could be reminded of that with or without the [helmet]. The truth is, that [helmet] doesn’t mean a damn thing. I’m sorry. It just doesn’t.”

THE POINT​

In that lobby, before the other phone calls, Demoff says he plans to get back to Mr. H and his friends shortly. He says the NFL might want to display the helmet at the Super Bowl in SoFi next February. He even gives the group a version of the latest Rams helmet as a thank you. He wonders aloud if he can build out a new headquarters—the one the Rams have planned to construct for years now—around this artifact that could show pro football’s evolution.
A modern Rams helmet next to the possible first prototype


Kohjiro Kinno/Sports Illustrated
I’m not thinking about the Super Bowl at that moment. I’m not thinking about displays. I’m not even thinking—not really—about this helmet that has come to dominate my life. I’m thinking about Fred Gehrke, sitting alone in that garage. I’m thinking about his life, as a football player, sure, but mostly as an artist.
Everyone and everything around the helmet fades as my mind wanders to a notion I had not previously considered. Perhaps our quest wasn’t about the helmet’s authenticity. Or even about the helmet, period. Maybe it was really about a man with pro football’s most impressive résumé, an eclectic, inventive soul who helped shape what the NFL has now become. If an estate sale and the ensuing debate over its contents can spark this kind of sleuthing, this kind of debate, then Fred Gehrke got what he deserved but never wanted: a reminder of his legacy and why it matters, of his art and what it changed.

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