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Cardinals at Rams

ITS GAME DAY!

The GDT is a live thread tradition here at ROD.

While we all get fired up watching the game, please remember our core principles; we always show respect for our team and each other.

Despite the emotional highs and lows watching a game, we will moderate this thread with that in mind, however please refrain from name calling. This applies to players, the Rams organization, and others.

This is the core rule of the GDT. Moderators are tasked to issue thread bans, at a minimum, to maintain this standard.

This is our team. Win or lose. Good days and bad.

Go Rams!

GGG v. Canelo Part 2 - Canelo wins SD

I'm sure there will be complaining, but I can't argue the results. Roy Jones Jr. was saying it the entire fight. Canelo went out there and fought GGG's fight. GGG needed to put him down, or he was going to lose. Canelo was the aggressor, dictated the fight, and backed GGG up for most of the night. I had it down as a draw, but I didn't think a slight Canelo win was crazy. Canelo landed a lot more power shots and had a 46 to 6 advantage on power shots to the body.

I think fans tend to overcredit GGG's jab. GGG had the two most dominant rounds (and almost scored a KO imo), but Canelo was dominating the first half of the fight. That was legitimately the best fight I've seen in years. It was a good, old-fashioned brawl. Those two guys have ridiculous chins.

EDIT: Whoops, mistake on the title. Should be "MD" (Majority Decision).

Still Watching The Rams LBs Play

After the Oakland game I rated the LB play as MARGINALLY SOLID, which is pretty good given their youth.

The standout among the LBs was Littleton. The guy was everywhere! Early in the game he got caught watching Ebukam go on a blitz and let Raider TE Cook go right by him on a big play. After that he settled down and played well.

I'm looking at the LB tackling because in a 34 defense the LBs have to tackle well. To often the Ram LBs are tackling high which leads to extra yards often.

Littleton, Ebukam, and Barron (when he gets back) are small LBs. They're fast but will many times be tackling guys that are bigger and they must wrap up at the legs to get these guys down.

Tackling has to be better!

Rams' Aaron Donald is playing into shape and hopes a bigger impact is in cards for Week 2

http://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/la-sp-rams-report-20180913-story.html

Peace of mind and a hefty bank account.

For Aaron Donald, those are the two main differences between Week 2 of last season and Week 2 of this one.
In 2017, the perennial Pro Bowl player ended a holdout without a contract extension on the eve of the season opener. He was not ready to play until the second game.

Now, with a $131-million extension in hand and a solid season-opening performance against the Oakland Raiders behind him, Donald is preparing for Sunday’s game against the Arizona Cardinals.


“Everything’s a lot better now,” Donald said Thursday.

Not that there isn’t room for improvement.

Donald, who sat out training camp and signed his extension 10 days before the opener, played most of the opener and made one tackle in the 33-13 victory over the Raiders. He recorded what appeared to be a sack but the play was nullified by a personal foul against Donald for falling on quarterback Derek Carr.

Donald said he could have played better.

“I’m always going to be my worst critic,” he said.

Defensive coordinator Wade Phillips agreed with Donald’s assessment of his performance.

“I want him to do better, he wants to do better,” Phillips said, “but he’s still a great football player.

“They had a rough time trying to keep him out of there.”

Facing a front that includes Donald, Ndamukong Suh and Michael Brockers, the Raiders employed a strategy that other teams are almost certain to emulate: Get the ball out of the quarterback’s hand as quickly as possible.

Brockers recorded the Rams’ lone sack, but the front helped limit the Raiders to 95 yards rushing and helped force three interceptions.

Donald, playing alongside Suh for the first time, characterized the ninth-year pro as, “just being him: a dominant football player.”

Safety John Johnson, who intercepted a pass in the end zone, said the Rams’ line can impose “wear and tear over the course of the game” on opponents.


Rams re-sign JoJo Natson to replace injured kick returner Pharoh Cooper, who's on injured reserve
Sep 12, 2018 | 9:10 PM

“They might not have gotten the big sack that they wanted or, like, a blatant pressure,” Johnson said, “but the quarterback is thinking about that rush coming.”

Cory Littleton, who made 13 tackles and intercepted a pass in his first start at middle linebacker, “showed out as much as anybody,” against the Raiders, Phillips said.

Matt Longacre and Dominique Easley played well in rotation at one outside linebacker spot, and Samson Ebukam also provided pressure.

Cornerback Marcus Peters’ interception return for a touchdown capped the victory, and gave the Rams momentum as they prepare for a Cardinals offense that includes quarterback Sam Bradford, running back David Johnson and receiver Larry Fitzgerald.

Asked if he expected Bradford to try to get the ball out quick, Donald grinned.

“I hope not,” he said, “but we going to see.”

Etc.

Austin Blythe will start again at right guard in place of Jamon Brown, who has one game left in his suspension for violating the NFL’s substance-abuse policy. “We do feel like he’s a starting-caliber player in this league,” coach Sean McVay said. “I think last week’s performance definitely indicated that.”… Linebacker Mark Barron did not practice because of an Achilles issue and appears to be doubtful again for Sunday’s game. Running back Todd Gurley, who was listed as a non-participant Wednesday, was a full participant Thursday.

Predict The Score Week 2 Cardinals @ Rams

Congrats to @flv for starting the season off with a bang, predicting the exact score in the Week 1 PTS contest. He picked up his 25,000 prize in the Rod sportsbook and I am sure he will put it to good use.

We turn the page to week 2 as Sam Bradford and the Arizona Cardinals come to town for his first match up since he was traded. Arizona lost last week to the Redskins by the score of 24-6

giphy.gif



Poor Sam might not know what's coming at him as he faces the D line of the mighty Los Angeles Rams
source.gif


So, predict the final score for this weeks game. The 1st poster who picks closest to the actual final score, including the correct winning team, will win $10,000 RODollars. Pick the exact final score and win 25,000 RODollars


so lets see those predictions people.

Rams TEs???

What a wonderful turn of events for Rams fans. Rather than searching for a beacon of light in an otherwise abysmal season - we are now searching for areas of improvement that will help to build the perfect beast.

With that said - what is wrong with the Rams TEs? They were non-existent in the offensive attack on Monday night. Not a single target or key block registered in the game. It was really evident in the red zone. An area where the Rams need improvement and no TEs contributions to be found.

Did anyone determine if the scheme kept them out of the mix or are that just that ineffective?

Streaming this weeks game.

OK old guy here and never have done this before (I swear).

RAMS will not be on my local TV this week, one of only 4 games that I will not be locally televised. Can one of you super people give me the detailed directions so I can stream Sundays game.

I have a smart TV and comcast wifi and thinking this might be the easiest.

I have a laptop but not sure it has a HDMI port?

Finally have a Samung Galaxy S8+ (might need to use this for a bit if the wife drags me out of the house).

https://old.reddit.com/r/nflstreams/ or https://nflreplays.net/
Are either of these what I should use?

Do I need to wait until after the game starts? If so will it start from the beginning?

Any other info I need? Maybe just wait until the replay gets posted here?

Thanks in advance, you guys are the BEST. :grouphug:


CVRAMSFAN
Jeff

Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Nominees for the Class of 2019

All associated with the Rams are in bold.
********************************************
http://www.sportingnews.com/us/nfl/...nees-list-news-2018/vkpdnud81scx1a42re4ui0cww

Quarterbacks

Randall Cunningham, Dave Krieg, Jeff Garcia, Donovan McNabb, Steve McNair

Running backs

Shaun Alexander, Tiki Barber, Earnest Byner, Larry Centers, Corey Dillon, Eddie George, Edgerrin James, Darryl Johnston, Eric Metcalf (WR/KR/PR), Clinton Portis, Fred Taylor, Herschel Walker, Chris Warren, Ricky Watters

Wide receivers

Isaac Bruce, Gary Clark, Henry Ellard, Torry Holt, Chad Johnson, Derrick Mason, Sterling Sharpe, Rod Smith, Hines Ward

Tight ends

Mark Bavaro, Tony Gonzalez, Brent Jones, Jay Novacek

Offensive linemen

Willie Anderson (T), Tony Boselli (T), Lomas Brown (T), Ray Donaldson (C), Alan Faneca (G), Chris Hinton (G/T), Kent Hull (C), Steve Hutchinson (G), Mike Kenn (T), Olin Kreutz (C), Kevin Mawae (C/G), Tom Nalen (C), Chris Samuels (T), Richmond Webb (T), Steve Wisniewski (G)

Defensive linemen

La’Roi Glover (DT/NT), Russell Maryland (DT), Leslie O’Neal (DE), Simeon Rice (DE), Richard Seymour (DT), Neil Smith (DE), Bryant Young (DT)

Linebackers

Carl Banks, Cornelius Bennett, Tedy Bruschi, London Fletcher, Seth Joyner, Wilber Marshall, Clay Matthews, Willie McGinest, Karl Mecklenburg, Sam Mills, Chris Spielman, Takeo Spikes, Darryl Talley, Zach Thomas

Defensive backs

Eric Allen (CB), Steve Atwater (S), Champ Bailey (CB), Ronde Barber (CB/S), Bill Bates (S), LeRoy Butler (S), Nick Collins (S), Thomas Everett (S), Rodney Harrison (S), Ty Law (CB), Albert Lewis (CB), John Lynch (S), Tim McDonald (S), Ed Reed (FS), Dennis Smith (S), Troy Vincent (CB), Adrian Wilson (S), Darren Woodson (S)

Special teams

Jason Elam (K), Jeff Feagles (P), Sean Landeta (P), Brian Mitchell (KR/PR also RB), Steve Tasker (ST also WR)

Coaches

Don Coryell, Bill Cowher, Tom Flores, Jim Hanifan, Mike Holmgren, Jimmy Johnson, Richie Petitbon, Dan Reeves, Marty Schottenheimer, Clark Shaughnessy, Dick Vermeil

Rams' Statistical Rankings Post-Week 1

Stats courtesy of https://www.teamrankings.com/nfl/team-stats/

OFFENSE

Yards per game: 365 (12th)
Yards per rush: 5.4 (2nd)
Yards per completion: 12.5 (8th)
Sacked Percentage: 2.94% (8th)
Third Down Conversion Percentage: 36.36% (17th)
Redzone Scoring Percentage (TD only): 40% (Percentages lumped together we are lower half)

DEFENSE

Points per game: 13 (5th)
Yards per game: 395 (26th)
Yards per completion: 10.3 (T-12th)
Sack Percentage: 2.44% (27th)
Third Down Conversion Percentage: 45.45% (26th)
Redzone Scoring Percentage (TD only): 50% (Percentages lumped together we are middle of pack)

THOUGHTS

Stats above back up what we saw in week one. Passing game was rusty and needs to improve but the protections look good so it should do so. That should also lead to improved third down conversion rate as well as better redzone production.

Points allowed looks great. Sack percentage isn't an ideal stat (wish I could find a trustworthy pressures stat which is far more indicative of what to expect going forward) and this first week had an opposing team that was dishing the ball extremely quickly to beat the rush so it's hard to draw much from it. Overall the defensive numbers are a bit skewed but bottom line is our defense still has to demonstrate it can consistently get itself off the field. Raiders IMO extended too many drives early on.

  • Locked
An amazing post by a gifted poster. Do Not Miss This One...

The poster is truly gifted and he goes by stlramz. Enjoy.

Here’s stlramz...

Rams have had a remarkable a history. For as much nonsense as we have endured, we have been graced with some of the greatest stories in NFL history. How does the worst team of the 1990s end up winning a SB with an undrafted QB who was only a few years removed from stocking groceries in Cedar Rapids, Iowa?

I mean, what are the odds of that?

While we as fans were basking in that glory, remarkably, around the same time, a young kid from Georgia, was riding on a bus to a 49ers game with Grandfather’s football team. Seated on the team bus next to Jesse Sapolu, no one outside his family really realized how much football meant to him.

On one of those trips, a Monday night game in Atlanta, that young boy was thrilled that he found himself on the sidelines of the 49ers game where future hall of famer Steve Young tosses him a towel before heading back out onto the field with his team.

Many of us were probably watching that game, not noticing and certainly not realizing, what a prominent role that young child would play in our futures.

Those within his family understood, however.

They recall the young teen working his way through a book that was given to him. The book, “Finding the Winning Edge”, was written by Bill Walsh, the mastermind of the great 49ers dynasty.

Given the boy’s obvious love of football and the fact that his grandfather had worked as Walsh’s GM, it seemed natural that he may be interested. The massive book covered all aspects of how Walsh built a championship organization from the top down and the bottom up -- but it wasn’t the type of book written for the casual fan. It was a how-to book, a book steeped in details and minutiae and designed for junkies and those deep into the game.

His father Tim noted that each night, before going to bed, that young boy would read a few pages from the book before going to sleep, eventually working his way through all 550 pages. In some way, it seemed that all the boy was interested in was learning about football.

Each step along the way to his ultimate destiny, this child found himself connected to influential football people until January of 2018, when that young kid, at age 31, took the podium for the Los Angeles Rams to become the youngest coach in NFL history.

Sometimes, you can see great things coming.

Before Sean McVay became the Rams coach, I knew very little about him. After he was hired, I learned of his history, his family, and the fact that he was a student of the game.

When he brought in Wade Phillips to Coach the Defense, I saw he was already light years ahead of coaches who bring in “their guys” even if they are not qualified or the best people for the job. When he retained “Bones”, I knew he got it. When he convinced Kromer that LA was the place to be, I knew he was practicing the philosophies of “Finding the Winning Edge” and “The Score Takes Care of Itself “– another of Walsh’s books he referenced when he was hired.

Surround yourself by great people, let them do their jobs, the score takes care of itself.

Heading to Oakland, I knew I should have been concerned. After all, it was Jon Gruden’s return to Oakland after a 16 year hiatus. He was an integral part of that McVay history – Gruden was the Master to McVay’s student.

I’ve watched enough movies (and saw the Redskins game the year before) to know that sometimes the Master @#$%& slaps the student reminding the student, that even a Master cannot share all of his knowledge and wisdom.

Raider fans knew that this could be one of the last home openers ever in Oakland and they wanted to welcome in their own Savior right. Black regalia abound as I strode into the stadium. I was happy to note a small but strong and proud contingent of Rams fans wearing the new wave of jerseys – Donald, Gurley, Peters, Cooks, Kupp, Goff, Woods.

Not a single Warner jersey to be found.

The new era was upon us.

Understanding I was still in Oakland and trying to build good Karma, I invite a close friend with me. He is a true raider fan and also the strongest and most intimidating person I know. A winner of many strong man competitions, whose mother was an arm wrestling world champion – Tom is a gentle grizzly who can turn quite ugly when people move into his personal space or threaten his friends.

With Tom seated next to me, I knew I had the necessary cover to administer whatever type of counter-smack was necessary.

Just before Kickoff - Howie Long is introduced to inaugurate the new season. The crowd is going crazy.

Yet I wasn’t nervous.

I thought back to Florida Rams post on this board letting the board know why he wasn’t nervous following it with pictures of Donald and Suh, with Wade and Sean, with Gurley and Cooks, Peters and Talib and I too realized there is too much talent here, too many playmakers . . . over 60 minutes with those players and that staff, sooner or later, it would show itself.

When the Rams deferred and the Raiders chose to take the ball, I was curious to see our vaunted new defense. When the Raiders drove down the field for a season opening TD my heart rate did not elevate even a bit which is extremely unusual.

The replay board showed a Rams player hooked onto Lynch’s leg getting dragged 5 yards into the end zone.

No doubt about it, even with people pushing the pile “Beast Mode” Lynch is a very strong man.

That said, I figured Gruden had months to plan this drive, understanding that the Rams didn’t know what he was going to run and given his absence from the NFL. I tip my hat to the Teacher, but he would soon learn -- his pupil had grown up.

What could have been the type of drive that sparks a team to a big win, hardly registered on the Rams sideline. From the 45-yard line, behind the Rams bench just 16 rows back, I saw McVay say a few words to Wade and then disengage.

A quick view of the Rams defense showed them chatting on the Rams bench.

No bowed heads, no exaggerated responses.

The guy in front of me turns around and says “you are in for a long day”.

I told him, “if you were actually good at predicting the future, you wouldn’t have bought that Mack 52 jersey”

I told him, “I’ll hear from someone that is wearing a jersey of a player that actually plays for the Raiders to predict the future” as his credibility was shot wearing a Bears player to the game.

He turns back mumbling “f you”.

I tell him, “Save your breath bro, you will need it to blow up your next date”.

He turns around again, sees Tom staring at him, then sits back down.

The first half plays out mostly like I expected it to. A bit rusty on offense which can be expected with an offense that is based on timing and rhythm.

That said, even with the rusty plays, you could see players breaking open here and there on offense and you knew, it was just a matter of time.

I must admit, I was surprised with how Dave Casper er eh, I mean Jared Cook was not only burning the rams (rams getting smoked by TEs has been a tradition for many years) but also how hard he was playing. When he trucked Talib for a first down, I almost didn’t recognize the guy. But, knowing he was a turd, it was only a matter of time before he did something stupid which he did when he loafed on the Peters pick 6.

The Rams special teams – particularly Hekker was unbelievable. The hangtime that guy gets, the way he flips the field, the consistency, its truly amazing. Its nice that with so many stars on this team, he now is not our sole focus for praise.

What I was most interested in, however, and why I travelled to Oakland was to see how this team interacted with each other. So-called “dream teams” on paper don’t always mesh. I wanted to see what type of comeraderie the team would show, how the coaches interacted with the players and how the players reacted with each other.

Other than an unexplained freak out by Marcus Peters in the 3rd Quarter on the sidelines – where he was engaging with a Raider player on the field in a VERY HEATED fashion, I saw a very workmanlike and professional team with clear lines of leadership.

The freak out however, proved to be instructive.

The thing with Marcus, he does appear to be a very emotionally volatile person. A few minutes before the big blowup he was engaging with fans near my section. However, it was none other than Aqib Talib who ultimately got into Peters face and backed him off the sideline and away from whoever he was engaged in on the field.

Another book referenced by McVay (I read all the books he mentions) is Extreme Ownership a book based on the leadership principals of the Navy Seals. The whole idea behind the book and leadership style is that you must take 100% ownership of your actions and decisions in order to be an effective leader of men. You hear McVay referencing ownership all of the time, this is what he is talking about and while Marcus apparently isn’t there yet, Talib is.

Talib is the leader and he demonstrated it to me right there and showed why he earned the Captain’s C. He took extreme ownership of his defense and shut the nonsense down.

When the Rams went into halftime, I told my buddy Tom, the Rams owned the 3rd Quarter almost all of last year. When you send in luminary like Wade with a genius like McVay inside at halftime and give them 12 minutes to craft a response to your actions, in most cases, the opponent is in trouble.

What we saw in the 3rd Quarter is a sign of things to come.

While this Raider team is not that good, their crowd was UP. The decibel reader at the stadium was consistently reading above 100 decibels for crowd noise. They were trying to will their coach and team to victory. It was the type of emotional game an underdog can win.

The Rams were having none of that.

Slowly but surely, the amazing amount of talent which has suddenly coalesced at Rams park, asserted itself. The defense rattled and confused Carr to the point where some of the fans were clamoring for AJ McCarron who had been signed a week earlier.

The oline was creating 1999 like pockets for Goff to throw from. He had time and could step into his throws. Some of the long balls missed by mere inches. In a few weeks, those will be backbreakers to the opposing teams.

What was most evident, however, and why I wanted to post following this otherwise workman like game, was the joy and love the players were showing for each other on the sidelines. It was clear that they like each other and know there is something special here.

After the Peters pick six, literally the entire bench, coaching staff, trainers etc, gave Marcus some love. They knew he was playing at home, in front of his family and what it meant to him.

Big Whit went to so many different players and hugged them. He and Goff stood embraced for probably over a minute.

It was cool to see.

After the pick six, most of the Raider fans hit the gate, so I was able to move to the first row behind the Rams bench.

I note that Goff’s uniform doesn’t appear to have any grass or dirt stains whatsoever, in fact, it looks like he was the backup QB and hadn’t played.

I take my shot: “Jared, you don’t even need to wash that uniform before the Cards game”.

He turns around, puts his hands on his shoulder pads and runs them down the entire front of his clean uniform showing the remaining rams fans that he agrees with the assessment.

We all cheer and Big Whit gives us a military salute.

Its just a start, but I for one, am going to savor what I hope is going to be a very long ride.

As I walked back to my car – through the pot filled air and scary Oakland streets, not a word of smack was spoken.

Even the guys dressed in the circus costumes and star wars get ups knew there was nothing to be said.

The student was now the Master.

Why is this Ram O so difficult to defend?

Yeah, the Rams are top shelf in their FO, on D, and ST. But I want to just comment on their O in this post.

I re-watched the Raider game and here are my general takeaways that bode well for this season and beyond.

Someone put a helluva lot of thought into selecting this O bunch. “Fits” were considered heavily in the respective acquisition processes. Not just for the locker room, but for the projected player ability to implement McVay’s strategies.

Consider, in no particular order, the following:

An amazing OL now exists in the front. A mixture of seasoned vets and youth. With impressive depth through at least Noteboom, Blythe, and Allen. With this OL, McVay knows that he can either run or pass as he chooses. And so does his opponent. Lol.

We have an elite RB in Gurley. Possibly the league’s best. Would you trade Gurley for ANY RB straight up? Me neither. Gurley is a terror to defend while running, pass receiving, or pass protecting. Truly a nightmare to defend.

We have 3 WR’s that excel in route running, great hands, blocking, and are all football smart. Two of them can consistently get behind the deep secondary. Geez, what more do we want?

Which brings me to the young Jared Goff. A QB that started to grow up before our very eyes last year under McVay. Smart, dedicated, calm, accurate, subtlely elusive in the pocket, already a master at play action and sweep fakes, can make all the throws... just missed on 4 passes to Woods and Cooks. Something to strike fear into the heart of opposing DC’s because they know he was only off by inches and that will only improve with more reps. And he excels with his ball security, a very valuable thing.

All of the above directed by this Sean McVay O prodigy. It’s possible that McVay has only scratched the surface of what can be done with such an above listed group of players. THAT’s gotta be a scary thought for our scheduled opponents.

But a couple of impressions are already evident.

This jet sweep has been raised to deadly status. Notice to the league was served with 4 different players gaining 6 or more yards every single time that Goff actually handed it off, one was a 19 yard Gurley TD! Then, when Goff faked the handoff the D found itself semi-paralyzed because it was partly out of position when forced to honor it. This will continue all season long and I don’t really know how the opposing D’s can ever fully defend it, given the quality of the players and QB involved. Last year, when Tavon came on the field it was a tip-off hat the sweep might be coming. But now? Gurley, Cooks, Woods, and Kupp are already on the field for virtuall every snap, so no tip-off.

As the announcers said on TV, McVay has designed an O where a run looks like a pass and a pass can look like a run presnap and even a second or so after the snap. Drives D’s nuts!

McVay has the flexibility to tailor his O to attack each week’s opponent at their weakest point. His O is far from one dimensional, IOW.

Another thing I admire about McVay. He doesn’t go into a shell and just run the ball to protect a modest lead late in the game. Oh, no. He keeps his boot on the neck of the opponent while calling some pass plays that result in clock killing 1st downs AND retaining possession of the ball. That late drive against the Raiders was a beautiful thing in itself, PLUS demonstrated his confidence in his players. The look on Gruden’s face could be described as grudging admiration, I think.

It’s early in the season, and the Ram O seemed kinda rusty for a while. But then we started seeing glimpses of what is in store from this O this season. And what other “wrinkles” has McVay yet to display? Can’t wait to find out.

In summary? It seems that Demoff, Snead, and McVay have done a magnificent job of assembling and developing, then deploying a remarkable group of O players that are going to entertain the heck out of us all season long.

And this post is just about the O. Don’t get me started on Wade’s D. Lol.

A fans view from Oakland

Ladies & Gentlemen....This is a post off the Herd Board from "stlramz" I felt it was classic and a must read for every Ram fan.....Enjoy!

Rams have had a remarkable a history. For as much nonsense as we have endured, we have been graced with some of the greatest stories in NFL history. How does the worst team of the 1990s end up winning a SB with an undrafted QB who was only a few years removed from stocking groceries in Cedar Rapids, Iowa?

I mean, what are the odds of that?

While we as fans were basking in that glory, remarkably, around the same time, a young kid from Georgia, was riding on a bus to a 49ers game with Grandfather’s football team. Seated on the team bus next to Jesse Sapolu, no one outside his family really realized how much football meant to him.

On one of those trips, a Monday night game in Atlanta, that young boy was thrilled that he found himself on the sidelines of the 49ers game where future hall of famer Steve Young tosses him a towel before heading back out onto the field with his team.

Many of us were probably watching that game, not noticing and certainly not realizing, what a prominent role that young child would play in our futures.

Those within his family understood, however.

They recall the young teen working his way through a book that was given to him. The book, “Finding the Winning Edge”, was written by Bill Walsh, the mastermind of the great 49ers dynasty.

Given the boy’s obvious love of football and the fact that his grandfather had worked as Walsh’s GM, it seemed natural that he may be interested. The massive book covered all aspects of how Walsh built a championship organization from the top down and the bottom up -- but it wasn’t the type of book written for the casual fan. It was a how-to book, a book steeped in details and minutiae and designed for junkies and those deep into the game.

His father Tim noted that each night, before going to bed, that young boy would read a few pages from the book before going to sleep, eventually working his way through all 550 pages. In some way, it seemed that all the boy was interested in was learning about football.

Each step along the way to his ultimate destiny, this child found himself connected to influential football people until January of 2018, when that young kid, at age 31, took the podium for the Los Angeles Rams to become the youngest coach in NFL history.

Sometimes, you can see great things coming.

Before Sean McVay became the Rams coach, I knew very little about him. After he was hired, I learned of his history, his family, and the fact that he was a student of the game.

When he brought in Wade Phillips to Coach the Defense, I saw he was already light years ahead of coaches who bring in “their guys” even if they are not qualified or the best people for the job. When he retained “Bones”, I knew he got it. When he convinced Kromer that LA was the place to be, I knew he was practicing the philosophies of “Finding the Winning Edge” and “The Score Takes Care of Itself “– another of Walsh’s books he referenced when he was hired.

Surround yourself by great people, let them do their jobs, the score takes care of itself.

Heading to Oakland, I knew I should have been concerned. After all, it was Jon Gruden’s return to Oakland after a 16 year hiatus. He was an integral part of that McVay history – Gruden was the Master to McVay’s student.

I’ve watched enough movies (and saw the Redskins game the year before) to know that sometimes the Master @#$%& slaps the student reminding the student, that even a Master cannot share all of his knowledge and wisdom.

Raider fans knew that this could be one of the last home openers ever in Oakland and they wanted to welcome in their own Savior right. Black regalia abound as I strode into the stadium. I was happy to note a small but strong and proud contingent of Rams fans wearing the new wave of jerseys – Donald, Gurley, Peters, Cooks, Kupp, Goff, Woods.

Not a single Warner jersey to be found.

The new era was upon us.

Understanding I was still in Oakland and trying to build good Karma, I invite a close friend with me. He is a true raider fan and also the strongest and most intimidating person I know. A winner of many strong man competitions, whose mother was an arm wrestling world champion – Tom is a gentle grizzly who can turn quite ugly when people move into his personal space or threaten his friends.

With Tom seated next to me, I knew I had the necessary cover to administer whatever type of counter-smack was necessary.

Just before Kickoff - Howie Long is introduced to inaugurate the new season. The crowd is going crazy.

Yet I wasn’t nervous.

I thought back to Florida Rams post on this board letting the board know why he wasn’t nervous following it with pictures of Donald and Suh, with Wade and Sean, with Gurley and Cooks, Peters and Talib and I too realized there is too much talent here, too many playmakers . . . over 60 minutes with those players and that staff, sooner or later, it would show itself.

When the Rams deferred and the Raiders chose to take the ball, I was curious to see our vaunted new defense. When the Raiders drove down the field for a season opening TD my heart rate did not elevate even a bit which is extremely unusual.

The replay board showed a Rams player hooked onto Lynch’s leg getting dragged 5 yards into the end zone.

No doubt about it, even with people pushing the pile “Beast Mode” Lynch is a very strong man.

That said, I figured Gruden had months to plan this drive, understanding that the Rams didn’t know what he was going to run and given his absence from the NFL. I tip my hat to the Teacher, but he would soon learn -- his pupil had grown up.

What could have been the type of drive that sparks a team to a big win, hardly registered on the Rams sideline. From the 45-yard line, behind the Rams bench just 16 rows back, I saw McVay say a few words to Wade and then disengage.

A quick view of the Rams defense showed them chatting on the Rams bench.

No bowed heads, no exaggerated responses.

The guy in front of me turns around and says “you are in for a long day”.

I told him, “if you were actually good at predicting the future, you wouldn’t have bought that Mack 52 jersey”

I told him, “I’ll hear from someone that is wearing a jersey of a player that actually plays for the Raiders to predict the future” as his credibility was shot wearing a Bears player to the game.

He turns back mumbling “f you”.

I tell him, “Save your breath bro, you will need it to blow up your next date”.

He turns around again, sees Tom staring at him, then sits back down.

The first half plays out mostly like I expected it to. A bit rusty on offense which can be expected with an offense that is based on timing and rhythm.

That said, even with the rusty plays, you could see players breaking open here and there on offense and you knew, it was just a matter of time.

I must admit, I was surprised with how Dave Casper er eh, I mean Jared Cook was not only burning the rams (rams getting smoked by TEs has been a tradition for many years) but also how hard he was playing. When he trucked Talib for a first down, I almost didn’t recognize the guy. But, knowing he was a turd, it was only a matter of time before he did something stupid which he did when he loafed on the Peters pick 6.

The Rams special teams – particularly Hekker was unbelievable. The hangtime that guy gets, the way he flips the field, the consistency, its truly amazing. Its nice that with so many stars on this team, he now is not our sole focus for praise.

What I was most interested in, however, and why I travelled to Oakland was to see how this team interacted with each other. So-called “dream teams” on paper don’t always mesh. I wanted to see what type of comeraderie the team would show, how the coaches interacted with the players and how the players reacted with each other.

Other than an unexplained freak out by Marcus Peters in the 3rd Quarter on the sidelines – where he was engaging with a Raider player on the field in a VERY HEATED fashion, I saw a very workmanlike and professional team with clear lines of leadership.

The freak out however, proved to be instructive.

The thing with Marcus, he does appear to be a very emotionally volatile person. A few minutes before the big blowup he was engaging with fans near my section. However, it was none other than Aqib Talib who ultimately got into Peters face and backed him off the sideline and away from whoever he was engaged in on the field.

Another book referenced by McVay (I read all the books he mentions) is Extreme Ownership a book based on the leadership principals of the Navy Seals. The whole idea behind the book and leadership style is that you must take 100% ownership of your actions and decisions in order to be an effective leader of men. You hear McVay referencing ownership all of the time, this is what he is talking about and while Marcus apparently isn’t there yet, Talib is.

Talib is the leader and he demonstrated it to me right there and showed why he earned the Captain’s C. He took extreme ownership of his defense and shut the nonsense down.

When the Rams went into halftime, I told my buddy Tom, the Rams owned the 3rd Quarter almost all of last year. When you send in luminary like Wade with a genius like McVay inside at halftime and give them 12 minutes to craft a response to your actions, in most cases, the opponent is in trouble.

What we saw in the 3rd Quarter is a sign of things to come.

While this Raider team is not that good, their crowd was UP. The decibel reader at the stadium was consistently reading above 100 decibels for crowd noise. They were trying to will their coach and team to victory. It was the type of emotional game an underdog can win.

The Rams were having none of that.

Slowly but surely, the amazing amount of talent which has suddenly coalesced at Rams park, asserted itself. The defense rattled and confused Carr to the point where some of the fans were clamoring for AJ McCarron who had been signed a week earlier.

The oline was creating 1999 like pockets for Goff to throw from. He had time and could step into his throws. Some of the long balls missed by mere inches. In a few weeks, those will be backbreakers to the opposing teams.

What was most evident, however, and why I wanted to post following this otherwise workman like game, was the joy and love the players were showing for each other on the sidelines. It was clear that they like each other and know there is something special here.

After the Peters pick six, literally the entire bench, coaching staff, trainers etc, gave Marcus some love. They knew he was playing at home, in front of his family and what it meant to him.

Big Whit went to so many different players and hugged them. He and Goff stood embraced for probably over a minute.

It was cool to see.

After the pick six, most of the Raider fans hit the gate, so I was able to move to the first row behind the Rams bench.

I note that Goff’s uniform doesn’t appear to have any grass or dirt stains whatsoever, in fact, it looks like he was the backup QB and hadn’t played.

I take my shot: “Jared, you don’t even need to wash that uniform before the Cards game”.

He turns around, puts his hands on his shoulder pads and runs them down the entire front of his clean uniform showing the remaining rams fans that he agrees with the assessment.

We all cheer and Big Whit gives us a military salute.

Its just a start, but I for one, am going to savor what I hope is going to be a very long ride.

As I walked back to my car – through the pot filled air and scary Oakland streets, not a word of smack was spoken.

Even the guys dressed in the circus costumes and star wars get ups knew there was nothing to be said.

The student was now the Master.

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