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Drew Brees gets $44.25 million fully-guaranteed over two years

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...4-25-million-fully-guaranteed-over-two-years/

Drew Brees gets $44.25 million fully-guaranteed over two years
Posted by Mike Florio on September 7, 2016

598596734-e1473277325728.jpg
Getty Images

The deal is done, with three squares on the calendar to spare.

Saints quarterback Drew Brees made it clear that he won’t negotiate a potential extension to his current contract after the season begins. That move, rooted in a strong desire to minimize distractions, nudged the two sides together to finalize a contract that keeps Brees in New Orleans for the next two years.

Per a league source with knowledge of the deal, it’s a five-year contract that automatically voids to two years, and it pays out $44.25 million fully-guaranteed over those two seasons. Coupled with the $20 million he was due to make this year, it’s a one-year extension worth $24.5 million.

The contract also has a no-trade clause and a term preventing the Saints from tagging him in 2018. This means that, after the 2017 season, Brees will be free to leave if he wants to, and if he’s still playing at a sufficiently high level to allow him to.

To date, there has been no indication that Brees has in any way diminished. And so his well-deserved $184.25 million haul since 2006 could push to $200 million and more in fewer than 18 months.
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Film Room: Ram v 9er preview

http://www.turfshowtimes.com/2016/9/7/12802940/film-room-preview-week-one-vs-san-francisco-49ers
Film Room Preview: Week One vs San Francisco 49ers

The Rams’ 2015 season ended in a crushing overtime loss to the division rival San Francisco 49ers. Now it’s time for revenge.
By QBKlass @QBKlass Sep 7, 2016, 12:00p

Opening a season on the road is never easy. The 49ers stuck it out to beat the Rams in Santa Clara at the end of last season, making a return to Levi Stadium that much more meaningful for the Rams. As abysmal as the 49ers may be this season, the Rams have problems of their own and a few mishaps could spell trouble.

~ Special thanks to Jerod Brown for giving perspective on the 49ers for this preview ~

Rams Offense vs 49ers Defense
The Rams struggled to sustain an offensive attack in last year’s Week 17 battle. Tavon Austin made a few plays early on, but the offense tapered off and became stagnant, allowing the 49ers to inch closer and closer to victory. That being said, the Rams were without star running back Todd Gurley, who had been averaging nearly 100 yards and a touchdown in his twelve starts prior to the 49ers game.

The Running Game
Without question, Gurley will carry the offense against the 49ers (and for the rest of the season). The Rams have a few ways they could go in terms of Gurley’s usage in the run game. For the most part, the Rams employ a zone running scheme, but man and gap concepts are sprinkled in as necessary. Outside zone plays could be lethal versus the 49ers.


The 49ers defense has problems tackling in space and out near the perimeter. Granted, their defensive line should be a bit improved as Arik Armstead heads into his second season and rookie DeForrest Buckner adds a more explosive presence upfront, but that does not save the 49ers defense as a whole. San Francisco's cornerbacks are not going to cause problems for the Rams in run defense, meaning it is on the Rams interior offensive line to keep the 49ers defensive line pinned inside just long enough for Gurley to burst up the field. On outside zone plays, it will be on guards Jamon Brown and Cody Wichmann to not allow the 49ers interior linemen to force Gurley out too wide.

Considering the youth and lack of strength that the 49ers have in their front seven, the Rams may be better off rolling with more power concepts. It worked out for them when they faced the 49ers last season and there is no reason to believe it can’t work again.

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Power out of the shotgun is a perfect concept for Gurley. He has the flexibility to adjust to tight angles when running out of the shotgun, while also being strong and fast enough to fly down hill behind the pulling guard.


Center Tim Barnes is a power running fiend. If there is anything Barnes is good at, it is blocking down hill and using his strength. Barnes should fare well versus the Niners front again this upcoming week. It is the two players to Barnes’ left and right that are worth questioning. Wichmann and Brown are listed as the starting guards, making them the focal points of this play.

If power is going to the right, the right guard is responsible for pinning the defensive tackle lined up over him back to the inside of the formation, which Brown did on the play above, while the left guard pulls around him. If power is going left, the opposite is true and the left guard must pin his defensive tackle inside, while the right guard pulls behind him. Wichmann and Brown can both operate in space, so asking them to find their man as the pulling guard should not be concerning. Rather, figuring out whether or not those two can consistently use their strength to pin players inside will be key to the Rams rushing success. The Rams should run power a few times early on and see if they can get something going.

On top of exposing the 49ers interior, power running would keep the Rams from running at outside linebacker Aaron Lynch. Though Lynch is known for being a speed rushy, he is deceptively dangerous as a run defender out on the edge. Lynch attacks linemen and set himself up to force plays back inside. He’s no slouch as a tackler, either, often using his long arms to corral ball carriers and, at the very least, slow them down. If the Rams want to run to the perimeter, Lynch will need to be taken care of. Keep an eye on Rodger Saffold to have his hands full with Lynch. That matchup will be critical to how well the Rams can run to the outside.

Play Action Passing
Gurley can and will also be used as a decoy for the passing game. With as lethal as Gurley can be as a runner, the fear of him carrying the ball can be used to the Rams advantage. The Rams were able to trick the 49ers with simple play action last year even without Gurley.

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On this play, the Rams paired a quick screen with a run fake that looked like a ‘wham’ concept. ‘Wham’ can be run out of any blocking scheme, but the backside blocker being a player coming across from one side of the formation to the other is the core of the play. That then allows the backside lineman, the left tackle in this case, to block down hill, theoretically creating a cut back lane between the ‘wham’ blocker and the backside lineman. It is a concept that marries power with versatility- a great fit for Gurley.

Now, what makes ‘wham’ an interesting concept for a run fake on a quick screen is that it sucks in the edge defender on that side. When outside linebacker Ahmad Brooks sees tight end Lance Kendricks working back to block the back side, he quickly assume that it’s going to be a running play and that he has to close the cut back lane. With Brooks sucked inside, the Rams get a three-on-two (ball carrier included) situation on the outside, allowing the receiver to pick up a solid chunk of yards and move the chains.

The Rams have play action boots in their disposal, too. With Gurley back in the lineup to divert defenses from the passing game and rookie tight end Tyler Higbee providing an athletic pass catching presence over the middle, the Rams could have a deadly boot-action passing formula on their hands.

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The route combo to the right side of the field is critical here. Wide receiver Bradley Marquez running up the sideline on a wheel route forces the outside linebacker dropping back in coverage to widen out in order to close the passing window. In doing so, the linebacker leaves a lot for room for the tight end crossing the field to work with between the right hash and the right numbers.

Similarly, Kendricks crossing the formation behind the line of scrimmage and leaking out to the flats does its part in sucking in the linebacker, leaving plenty of space to throw over the top of him. Quarterback Case Keenum then just has to complete the one-on-one throw, which he does on the play above.

With Keenum at quarterback and the absence of a true No.1 wide receiver, the Rams will have to rely on running the ball and executing on play action, as well as operate out of a lot of two tight ends sets with Kendricks and Higbee. The 49ers defensive back group is atrocious, so it is possible that we see Austin or Kenny Britt slip by them once or twice for a deep reception, and we will likely see more successful intermediate passing to the boundary than we will for the rest of the season, but that should not be something the Rams count on for this game or at any point this season.

Rams Defense vs 49ers Offense
Pass Defense
In Week 17’s game last year, the Rams ran a lot of man coverage versus the 49ers. Considering how much pressure they were able to generate with four or five rushers, it made sense to play a more aggressive style of coverage throughout the game. The problem, though, is that man coverage leaves the Rams exposed against hiding wide receivers in stacked sets.

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Right before the snap, San Francisco motions the outside receiver, Anquan Boldin, to be the middle man in a trips set, rewiring who covers who for the Rams defense. Instead of Boldin being the outside receiver and Trumaine Johnson’s responsibility, Quinton Patton becomes the outside receiver and, in turn, Johnson’s man. Patton releases and cuts inside of the inner most player in the trips set, Blake Bell. Doing so gives Patton about eight yards between himself and a trailing Johnson, making for an easy pitch-and-catch for Blaine Gabbert and Quinton Patton.

Johnson is normally quite reliable, though, and the Rams defensive failure on the play above is more a product of great offensive play design than Johnson’s shortcomings. The real concern is with the rest of the Rams cornerbacks. With E.J. Gaines not fully readjusted to the game, it is likely that the Rams roll with some mixture of Lamarcus Joyner and Coty Sensabaugh as the second cornerback. Considering neither of them looked good in the preseason, expect the 49ers to try picking on them early and often.

Thankfully, the cornerbacks should have plenty of help. The 49ers offensive line is still a major question mark, giving the Rams defensive line to tee off on them. Aaron Donald, Michael Brockers and Dominique Easley make for a terrorizing trio of defensive tackles that the 49ers will have to deal with. At any time, the Rams will have two of them on the field at once (maybe even three, as Easley can play defensive end) and will give the 49ers no chance to breathe.

Due to the ferocity of the interior defensive line and defensive end Robert Quinn’s prowess on the edge, the Rams should have no problem generating consistent pressure with four rushers. Rushing just four defenders then allows the Rams to drop seven players into coverage and close off Gabbert’s passing lanes. Gabbert will have to deal with immediate pressure and heavy traffic in coverage. That is a disastrous recipe for any quarterback, let alone one as skittish as Gabbert.

Being Aggressive Against the Run
Largely due in part to former Rams linebacker James Laurinaitis, the Rams defense lacked the aggression from their middle linebacker that they needed.

LASFW1-5.gif

The Rams front seven needs to function like the Carolina Panthers’ front does. The Panthers have a nasty defensive tackle duo that allows their linebackers to sprint at plays as soon as they see them, instead of having to wait for the play to develop for a moment.

The Rams are built the same way. Some combination of Brockers, Donald and Easley will disrupt every run play and force running backs to scramble. When runners have to scramble, the only thing that ever saves them is when a linebacker is waiting on the play to come to him instead of the linebacker attacking the play. The Rams linebackers need to attack the line of scrimmage.

Mark Barron will have no issue attacking the line of scrimmage. Barron is a headhunter. Even when he was forced into an unfamiliar role last year, he proved that he could play fast and hit hard. The question mark is Alec Ogletree, who missed most of last season.

Ogltetree can be aggressive, but he has moments of uncertainty and gets his feet stuck in the mud. Granted, he did it far less often than Laurinaitis did, but it was still a problem. In 2016, he will need to be more aggressive and decisive because he has a defensive line that is fully enabling him to do so. The season opener versus the 49ers will be Ogletree’s first game back and he will have the opportunity to prove that he can be an attacking leader for the defense.

Conclusions
This will almost certainly be a low scoring game. The 49ers have a miserable offense being lead by Blaine Gabbert, who stands little to no chance versus the Rams bevy of pass rushers. For the same reason Gabbert will struggle, the 49ers running game will struggle to get going. Carlos Hyde is a fine running back, but the 49ers offensive line is going to get beat down by the Rams front. The 49ers best chance at success is hoping that Torrey Smith can get behind the Rams’ safeties- which is quite plausible- but even if he does, counting on Gabbert to complete a deep throw is a last resort.

On the flip side, the Rams should have enough offensive firepower to outscore the 49ers. Gurley is arguably the best running back in the league and, against a shaky 49ers defensive line, the offensive line has to be merely serviceable in order for Gurley to have a good game. Keenum will likely open the game with a handful of screen throws, which is a great move considering how poorly the Rams defended Austin last season. Beyond that, Keenum needs to simply protect the ball, a task he should be able to handle given San Francisco’s lack of playmakers at cornerback.

Even if the Rams win, it’s going to be an ugly game, folks.


Something "Special" to look at before the Season Starts!

As a fill-in, for the last day before the Season starts, I thought it might be nice to look back at " All the Head Coaches The Rams have ever Had!!" Yep! All 25 of them!!:mrburnsevil:
I'll break this up into a couple or so posts for easy Reading, and your welcome to make comments along the Way!!:D Four of them I could find photos of, but I'll mention them anyway!!
Cleveland Rams:
#1) Damon Wetzel - 1936 ( Sorry no photo, But he was our 1st HC!)
He had a 5-2-2 Record w/ a .667 Win %.

#2) Hugo Bezdek - 1937-1938
Bezdek_Hugo1937 to38.jpg

He had a record of 1-14-0 w/ a .o71 Win %(n)

#3) Art Lewis - 1938
Art_Lewis_rams hc 1938.jpg

He was a interim HC after they fired Bezdek. He had a Record of 4-4-0/ .500%

#4) Dutch Clark - 1939-1942
( Sorry No photo) He had a Record of 16-26-2 w/ a .386 Win %.

#5) Buff Donelli - 1944
( Sorry again No Photo) But he stand out among all Rams HC's because his Team score the Fewest points ever by any team in the League, in a single year! 188 Points! But, to be fare, in those days it was only a 10 game Season! He did have a 4-6-0 Season a .400 win %.

#6) Adam Walsh - 1945-1946
Walsh_Adam 1945 to 1946.jpg

He had a 15-5-1 Reg. Season Record w/ a .738 Win % and a 1-0 Record in post Season. He gave the Rams their 1st League Championship in 1945, and was Coach of the year!

L.A. Head Coaches:
#7) Bob Snyder - 1947
( Sorry, no photo, but he is the Last one I don't have a photo of!!)
He had a 6-6-0 Record/ .500%

#8) Clark Shaughnessy - 1948-1949
Clark-Shaughnessy1.png

He had a Reg. Season record of 17-8-0 and a Post Season Rec. of 0-1.

#9) Joe Stydahar - 1950-1952
halas_center Stydahar right.jpg

In the above photo, he's on the right w/ George Halas in the middle!
He had a record of 17-8-0/ a .686 win % and went 2-1 in Post Season including the Rams 2nd League Championship in 1951!! ( Great Year '51!)
stydahar-joe1x.jpg

This^ photo is from his College Playing Days!


#10) Hamp Pool - 1952-1954
Hamp Pool1.jpg
This is the best photo I could find of Hamp!
He had a 23-10-2 Record a .686 win %. in the Regular Season and he was 0-1 in Post Season.
I think they got rid of him for our next Coach!!
Time for a short Break, be back with the next 15 shortly! Some Really great stuff to come, My word on it!!




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

By Sam Farmer

[www.latimes.com]

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Peter King's Super Bowl 51 Prediction

http://mmqb.si.com/mmqb/2016/09/07/super-bowl-51-prediction-peter-king-nfl-mailbag

Super Bowl 51 Prediction: Pittsburgh over Green Bay
by Peter King


There is an old saying in coaching that you never pick up the next season where you left off the previous one. The point basically is that every season is a new one and what you did eight months ago just doesn’t matter.

Two teams would argue with that: Pittsburgh and Green Bay. They are my choices to reach Super Bowl 51 in Houston next February, and each has some memories that are helping with motivation.

On my training camp tour this summer, I sensed an unease in each camp. Aaron Rodgers is still upset with his level of play last year; he told me 2016 was his most important season. When you’re as great as Rodgers, and you have lousier stats than Brian Hoyer for a season, that tends to eat at you for a good bit of the offseason. And he’s not the only one in the Green Bay locker room who feels like some atonement must be made for how 2015 went down.

As for the Steelers, I sense a disbelief that the season ended the way it did, with a crushing loss mentally and physically in Denver, coming off a Ravens-Steelers type of vengeful match in Cincinnati the previous week that robbed Pittsburgh of wideout Antonio Brown for the AFC semifinal loss. You can’t convince the Pittsburgh offense that if Brown played that day in Colorado, it would have been the Steelers, not the Broncos, facing Carolina in the Super Bowl last February.

I’ll start there, with the Steelers. In Latrobe this summer, there was an emphasis on the small things all over their training camp. In all camps, you see receivers staying after practice to work with the Jugs machine to improve hands. Brown has taken this to another level. He catches 130 passes after each practice from the machine. Then he has an assistant mug him while he is trying to make one-handed catches and catches close to the ground. “If you’re not getting better,” Brown said that day, “You’re getting worse. I’m not the only guy around here who feels that way.”

I think Ben Roethlisberger is good enough to make up for the full season loss of Martavis Bryant and the quarter-season loss of Le’Veon Bell to advance to his third Super Bowl in 13 years. On defense, year two of coordinator Keith Butler will have the Steelers feeling more comfortable with their post-Dick LeBeau scheme.

For Green Bay, this could be the last chance Clay Matthews and 36-year-old Julius Peppers have to be impact players together on a playoff team. GM Ted Thompson is a ruthless sort, and wouldn’t feel guilty if he had to cut one or the other for age or performance after the season. It’s only a matter of time before Peppers gets that tap on his shoulder.

I love versatile defensive tackle Mike Daniels. The Packers will have to be good with some unproven players at inside linebacker (fourth-round rookie Blake Martinez needs to prove much as a nearly every-down player), which is why Peppers, even at his age, is so important.

On offense, getting back Jordy Nelson promises to cure so many ills. Nelson takes the pressure off Randall Cobb to produce beyond the way he should as a complementary receiver. And with Eddie Lacy back in reasonable shape, it’s going to set the stage for Rodgers to have his full array of weapons and to be able to be Aaron Rodgers again.

I thought about several other Super Bowl possibilities on my camp trip this summer. I almost went for the shocker and put Oakland as the AFC representative; I was sorely tempted because of the explosive offense and a defense that has a genius talent in Khalil Mack. I also was tempted by Arizona and Minnesota in the NFC and Denver in the AFC. But the quarterback situations in January for all three gave me pause.

New England’s a tempting pick(*due to my massive and bizarre man-crush on them*), because of intense motivation and a manageable schedule, as well as the fact the Patriots are still really good. Carolina I could see returning out of a weak NFC South, and Seattle could make another run with my MVP pick, Russell Wilson.

But give me the Steelers in Houston 22 weeks from now, 30-23 over Green Bay. I call it a legacy-builder for Roethlisberger and a way for a coach who gets far too little credit, Mike Tomlin, to ascend to the perch of the great coaches, where he belongs.

Referee for Rams@49ers

http://www.footballzebras.com/2016/09/06/week-1-referee-assignments-4/

Bill Vinovich

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Vinovich

Bill Vinovich is an American football official in the National Football League (NFL)
from 2001 to 2006 and since 2012, as well as a college basketball official.

Vinovich began his career in the NFL as a side judge on the officiating crew headed by referees Dick Hantak (2001) and Ed Hochuli (20022003) before being promoted to referee for the start of the 2004 NFL season.

Due to a heart condition, Bill Vinovich retired from field duty prior to the 2007 season, to serve as the replay official for Ed Hochuli. In 2012, doctors gave Vinovich a clean bill of health, and he returned for the 2012 NFL season as a substitute official, working several games during the season.

He was the referee of Super Bowl XLIX, played on February 1, 2015 at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Before that, he was the alternate referee of Super Bowl XLVII, which was played in New Orleans on February 3, 2013.

In addition, Vinovich has officiated seven other post-season games, including two conference championship games (2002 and 2015), three divisional playoff games (2003, 2012, and 2014), and two wild card playoff games (2006 and 2013).

Vinovich's 2016 NFL officiating crew consists of umpire Bruce Stritesky, head linesman Phil McKinnely, line judge Mark Perlman, field judge Michael Banks, side judge Gary Cavaletto, and back judge Greg Meyer.

OLd Rams games on a cloud:just click

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

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

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

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

1980 MNF Rams vs Dallas

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

My Wish for the Upcoming Season.....

After reading @Ramrocket 's thread.... I just want us to play outside of our division like we play in our division.. It's crazy how we can toughen up against very good teams in our division (maybe not so much the Whiners this year as in the past), yet we let cupcakes from weaker divisions beat us. If we played all season like we do teams in our division, can anyone say 10-6? :cool:

It's perplexing and it makes me wonder how Fisher gets these guys up for division games, yet can't for the cupcakes (teams we should beat) outside of it. Who knows.. We may not play great in the division this year, but it just makes me sick to see the level of play vs division (good teams) and then see us play down to the others. . Thoughts and comments (civil) appreciated.

Hard Knocks 5 : The Final Edition

Joyner had a well publicized bad week. Whining after his Game 3 eviction because of a fighting penalty, and not being allowed to practice, then whining over who know's what and got dressed to leave camp. Fisher talked him down and seems to have gotten him back on track.

Westbrooks & Chubb getting called out by coaches.

McRoberts tells team-mates he knows he's cut immediately after flubbing punt return for fumble. Later his TD reception from Mannion highlites the ups and downs these guys face every minute of trying to make the team.

Kush really shows good leadership on the field and in the locker room, his block frees up a long rush TD. Would have liked to have kept this guy on board.

Rams packing up and moving to Thousand Oaks on the same day final cuts have to be made.

Rock, the grim reaper, back at it for the final :redcard: cuts. Looked as though he was messing with some guys as he approached some players who were safe, they wondered if they were next.

Ends with a production mistake in Fisher's office, and one of the off camera guys says that's some 7 - 9 shi*. Fish says yeah, that's fu*kin 7 -9 shi*. :LOL:

Why I'm not worried about Goff

The kid is at a fork in the road, being deactivated will either deflate his balloon or inspire his talent. When I think about what he did with that Cal team tells me he's not a quitter, quite the opposite. We may or may not make the playoffs this year but by next season we'll be a serious contender. I think our weakness this year is WR's, hopefully Gurley and the Tight Ends will keep our offense alive. Bottom line, give Goff a break....... for now.

No New love for LA Rams

More of the same lack of respect for the Rams from NFL journalists (and I use that term loosely in regard to Pete Prisco) despite the high profile move to LA. Not that I expected much in the way of change but the increased scrutiny on our team through Hard Knocks and in general associated with the move to LA. But I did hope that with increased exposure, some hacks would at least do their homework on the potential in this team rather than just write them off on the basis of the diabolical 12 past seasons.

But no, Prisco has just released his season predictions in which he has the Rams going 5-11. There seems to be a total disregard for our performance within the division over the past couple of years as well as he has us only beating the 49ers. I have come to expect this each and every year but it doesn't make it any easier to digest.

http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/priscos-2016-nfl-picks-32-teams-269-games-one-super-bowl-champ/

Gordo: Rams giving haters plenty of reasons to smile

If this was already posted mods please delete

http://www.stltoday.com/sports/colu...cle_860be581-6fcc-5e83-ac75-c7f0b7b6a826.html
Jeff Gordon 09/05/2016
526a9a7c04047.image.jpg

Gordo: Rams giving haters plenty of reasons to smile

Since St. Louis stole the Rams from Los Angeles, you can’t really complain that LA stole them back.

Because you welcomed Georgia Frontiere despite her many eccentricities, you shouldn’t begrudge the City of Angels the right to embrace land-hoarding recluse Stan Kroenke.

What goes around comes around, as Justin Timberlake would sing.

But as jilted fans you certainly can lash out against the sheer incompetence of Kroenke’s regime and his tactless departure. Cheering against the Rams is a healthy way to blow off steam and vent your spleen.

Fortunately they have looked like the Same Old Sorry (Act) Rams during their return to LA.

The problem starts at the top. Listen to Rams CEO Kevin Demoff rave about Kroenke to the Los Angeles Times:

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

Yes, well, Kroenke is quite the ground-breaker when it comes to converting billions in family wealth into steady sports failure. His Denver Nuggets and Colorado Avalanche can’t keep pace with their NBA and NHL rivals and his Rams set modern standards for futility.

It’s extremely difficult to remain irrelevant in the parity-minded NFL, but, like Kevin says, Stan challenges his people to envision the impossible.

That explains how coach Jeff Fisher could be in line for a contract extension after guiding the Rams to four losing seasons. That explains how tag-along general manager Les Snead could still be employed despite wasting precious draft picks and blowing millions on useless free agents.

Impossible? With the Rams it’s surely not.

This season they may outshine the San Francisco 49ers — who are banking on the unlikely Chip Kelly-Blaine Gabbert collaboration — but they won’t seriously challenge the Seattle Seahawks and Arizona Cardinals in the NFC West.

Recurring themes undermine this team. At quarterback the Rams pulled the reverse RGIII maneuver and spent multiple draft picks to select Jared Goff first overall in the draft.

Trouble was, Goff wasn’t a Robert Griffin III-caliber prospect and he certainly wasn’t another Andrew Luck. He was a middle to late first-round prospect who rose to the top during a down year at his position.

Like most young quarterbacks, he will need a few seasons to develop properly. Asking him to become the front man for a team moving back into the challenging LA market was absurd.

Look at the numbers Goff posted in the preseason: 55.8 passer rating with a 44.9 completion percentage, two interceptions, four sacks, three fumbles and an average gain of 4.7 yards per passing attempt.

If he serves as the face of the franchise, then the franchise wears a befuddled expression.

By default, pint-sized scrapper Case Keenum remained the starting quarterback. And after a messy preseason finale, Fisher suggested Goff could open the season at No. 3 behind Keenum and fringe prospect Sean Mannion.


Goff would become the first quarterback since, ahem, JaMarcus Russell to arrive as the first overall pick and not start in Week 1. That second overall pick Carson Wentz is the Philadelphia Eagles’ starting quarterback just adds to the disappointment.

Goff’s reserve role is probably for the best, because the Rams lack aerial firepower. Hapless Brian Quick dropped more passes this summer, leaving Kenny Britt, gadget player Tavon Austin and a bunch of rookies as the go-to targets.

The young offensive line remained unsteady, too, particularly with right tackle Rob Havenstein missing preseason time with an injury.

While elite running back Todd Gurley can move the chains, the Rams lack a change-of-pace back. Speedy Tre Mason, a former 75th overall draft pick, washed out of the NFL with some alarming mental health problems.

(After an offseason arrest, Mason told officers that “he was going to call the White House and we were all going to lose our jobs” and that “the police were responsible for teaching al-Qaida how to fly planes.”)

The Rams preseason included the usual special teams sloppiness and practice field chippiness Fisher-coached teams are known for. HBO’s “Hard Knocks” highlighted a brawl started by middle linebacker Alec Ogletree and escalated by Gurley.

Fisher lit into his players with a profanity-laced lecture. From the looks of things this summer, that won’t be the last time he addresses them in such coarse terms.

You should do the same if makes you feel better. Swear your lack of allegiance to the Rams again and again as their sacks, fumbles and interceptions mount.

Let go of it all, from Brian Quick to Jake Long to Jared Cook to the Kellen Shaun Austin Nick Clemens Hill Davis Foles mish-mash at quarterback. Yell loud enough and perhaps those blurred memories of one wobbly pass fading into the next incompletion will finally quit haunting you.

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The Rams have officially launched into a new area locating to Los Angeles California and we have launched into a new era ourselves. Here is our debut podcast that will be weekly for Downtown Rams. It will be Blaine Grisak and Jake Ellenbogen hosting. We will look to have some special guests on the show. Thanks everyone for your support and we hope you enjoy whats to come!

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Bill Belichick: David Johnson isn't Marshall Faulk

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...l-belichick-david-johnson-isnt-marshall-faulk

  • 0ap1000000222748.jpg
  • By Chris Wesseling
  • Around the NFL Writer
  • Published: Sept. 5, 2016 at 10:03 p.m.
  • Updated: Sept. 6, 2016 at 12:32 p.m.


Patriots coach Bill Belichick isn't ready to break out the anointing oils for Cardinals running back David Johnson.

The Arizona braintrust spent the offseason lavishing unusually lofty praise on their uniquely talented second-year star.

Head coach Bruce Arians set the bar high when he acknowledged in February that Johnson has a chance to be one of the all-time best at his position. Running backs coach Stump Mitchell believes there's a Hall of Fame bust in the former Northern Iowa star's future.

All Pro defensive back Tyrann Mathieu drew comparisons between Johnson and St. Louis Rams legend Marshall Faulk. General manager Steve Keim raved about Johnson as a peerless receiving back.




"A lot of people have compared him to Marshall Faulk, and our coaches had Marshall Faulk in Indy," Keim explained last month, providing a hint at Johnson's future role. "I think he's very similar in some ways athletically and in terms of ball-catching skills to Marshall."

Those Faulk comparisons landed on Belichick's radar this week as he prepares to do battle with Johnson in the season debut of Sunday Night Football.

"When (the Rams) went to a three-receiver set, they just split (Faulk) out as a third receiver along with the other two receivers and a tight end. So they ran an 11-personnel looking formation but he was the third receiver," Belichick explained during a Monday conference call. "I don't know that's quite David Johnson's skill set. I don't know if there's many players in the league who could do what Marshall Faulk did. He was a pretty special and unique player.

"Johnson's a good receiver, he catches the ball well and has good run-after-catch skills. He can make people miss. Again, he's got the strength to break tackles. And he's got some speed to separate. Marshall Faulk, that's putting the bar pretty high with him."

Starting with Johnson's third NFL game in late September of last season, Arians did indeed begin splitting his rookie out wide or in the slot for 11-personnel (one back, one tight end) packages. If not for Chris Johnson's season-ending injury that forced the younger Johnson into a workhorse backfield role, Belichick would have seen that alignment more often from mid-November through January.

Now that he has the luxury of backfield depth again, Arians can continue to concoct new methods to take advantage of Johnson's mismatch potential in the passing game.

That said, it's easy to see why Belichick would reject the notion of placing Johnson in Faulk's class.

On a fabled "Greatest Show on Turf" team loaded with Kurt Warner, Torry Holt and Isaac Bruce, the transcendent Faulk was the focal point of Belichick's masterful "Bullseye" game plan in Super Bowl XXXVI.


"What sets him apart from everybody else is that he can go from a standing start to full speed faster than anybody I've ever seen," former Colts coach Ted Marchibroda said in David Halberstam's 2005 book, The Education of a Coach. "When he runs the ball and is forced to hesitate, his next step is full speed."

Warner believed it was Faulk's quarterback-like field vision that set him apart from other backs of his era. Former Rams player personnel chief Charley Armey bolstered that assessment.

"He runs with his eyes probably as well as any back in pro football, probably in the history of pro football," Armey told Halberstam. "His legs allow him to do what his instincts and eyes tell him to do."

The Cardinals have seen Johnson's exploits on a daily basis for over a year now. As hyperbolic as their assessment might seem from afar, the game film suggests they are about to unleash a transcendent talent in 2016.

Even if Johnson proves to be the rare back with natural receiving skills on par with Faulk's, though, what are the chances that he can also duplicate the Hall of Famer's unparalleled instincts, vision and suddenness?

High praise from Belichick is regarded as the "white whale" for NFL players. Perhaps Johnson can join Faulk on Belichick's opponent Mt. Rushmore with a memorable performance versus the Patriots on Sunday night.
******************************************************************************************************
Belichick Fan?Nope me either,but today I hate him a tiny smidge less.
So freakin tired of the David Johnson/Faulk comparisons.
Johnson hasn't even played a full season and he is getiing compared to
The Greatest COMPLETE back to ever play the game.
So F.U. Arians and anyone else making this comparison,Johnson hasn't earned the
right to even be mentioned in the same breath as the 'Great One".
Oh yea did I mention..... F.U. Arians

Jared Goff to be inactive for Rams' season opener/NFL.com

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...ed-goff-to-be-inactive-for-rams-season-opener

When the Rams open their season against the 49ers on Monday Night Football, No. 1 overall pickJared Goff will be in street clothes and a punter will be the team's emergency third-string backup.

That's the latest from NFL Network's Steve Wyche, who spoke with Rams coach Jeff Fisher on Tuesday. Fisher told Wyche that Sean Mannion will be the team's backup and punter Johnny Hekkerwill be the emergency backup. Teams almost never make three quarterbacks active due to special teams availability, which is the main reason why Goff is sitting.

Fisher added that Goff and Mannion could potentially switch for the home opener against Seattle the following week. He also called Carson Wentz's situation in Philadelphia completely different from that of Goff. The Eagles felt good enough about the No. 2 overall pick to trade their starter and elevate Wentz into a Week 1 starting role. Fisher, according to Wyche, said that "Goff will one day be the starter but not until he is ready."

"Jared's had a great camp, so has Sean. Case is clearly our starter. I think Week 1 just to settle things down ... it's probably going to be, like I mentioned last week, it's probably going to be three and inactive," Fisher said. "That's just how it goes. And then next week we'll flip them. I just want him to feel and sense and absorb the pressures of Week 1. He's going to be a great player. As we've said from Day One, we're not rushing him. We don't have to rush it. I'm really happy with where he is right now. It's unfair to compare him to anybody else. I know Philly has got their situation, it's a little different and trading Sam so Carson is going to start, but you know Jared is in a good place right now. He's done some really good things, so I'm really pleased with his progress."

This move can be interpreted 1,000 different ways. On one hand, if a team is going to invest the amount of equity that the Rams have placed in Goff, wouldn't they expect Goff to lead the team on opening night?

The Rams have also been steadfast in their comments about Keenum, who is a free agent after this year. General manager Les Snead and Fisher both indicated that there was a real chance Keenum would be the starting quarterback to open the season. A ho-hum preseason for Goff -- 22-of-49 passing (44.9 completion percentage), two touchdowns and two interceptions -- likely didn't help his chances of ascending the depth chart so early. It's also important to remember that some old-school coaches simply prefer to make their top picks earn the privilege. Eli Manning, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2004 draft, did not start a game for the Giants until Nov. 21, 2004. Alex Smith, the No. 1 overall pick the following season, did not start a game until October.

The Rams feel like they have a winning team, which is the only reason why they wouldn't prefer Goff get his lumps and learn from his mistakes. If he continues to be inactive on game day, though, more questions will be raised. In the meantime, Fisher says he'll continue to get substantial practice reps.

"We're probably no different than anybody else," he said. "I'm going to have both Sean and Jared work against the defense. I hold the card, and when I hold the card, I want them to put it in our terminology. So I show them the card real quick, they call the play and they go. So they learn. The reps are valuable. They're hard to get, but he's going to get them. It's just a matter of him -- I think the reps are one thing, and we'll get him reps -- but it's just a matter of him feeling everything. You just kind of feel it. So we're in a good place. Regardless of what everybody else is saying out there, he's our quarterback, he's going to be our franchise player, it's just not right now."

Cortland Finnegan released by Saints

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2016/09/06/saints-release-cortland-finnegan/

Saints release Cortland Finnegan
Posted by Josh Alper on September 6, 2016

The Saints won’t have cornerback Cortland Finnegan, 32, on the field in Week One.

PFT has learned, via a league source, that the Saints have released Finnegan. The former Titans, Rams, Dolphins and Panthers corner signed with the team last month.

Finnegan is a vested veteran and his salary for the entire season would be guaranteed if he were on the team for the first week of the regular season. It has not been unusual in past years to see a team part ways with a player in Finnegan’s position leading up to the first game and then bring him back later in the season.

Finnegan’s departure leaves the Saints with four corners on the active roster.