- Joined
- Nov 29, 2018
- Messages
- 23
Anyone else read this book? I'm most of the way through the book.
A few things stand out. I have memories as a 12, 13, 14, ,15 and 16 year old kid, remembering all of the Ram hold outs that seemed to happen ever training camp during the 80s. They had one of the best teams in the NFL, but they just didn't want to pay their players. If the book was true, it sounds like the organization had some pretty bad money problems that included shifting money around to cover checks. ED says the initial check that was cut to Jim Everett after the trade actually bounced.
And man, was ED underpaid. He signed a 4 year, 2 million contract with a 900K singing bonus. It turned out that 600K of that bonus was a forgivable loan, which was unforgiven after they traded him. He was obviously a top 3 RB (I think he was THE best) in the league at the time, but was barely in the top 10 salaries for RBs. Many RBs made around or over a million a year, and he didn't even make half of that. If he would've been taken care of and stayed, what could've been, as that offensive line was definitely one of the top, if not THE top offensive line in Rams history.
He mentions that one of his toughest losses as a Ram was the playoff loss to the Giants in 84. That Ram team could've given that 84 Niner team a serious run for their money, as they later did in 89 (in the regular season) without ED.
In the end, if ED somehow stayed a Ram, I think the Rams history would've been much different and could've included more Super Bowl titles.
A few things stand out. I have memories as a 12, 13, 14, ,15 and 16 year old kid, remembering all of the Ram hold outs that seemed to happen ever training camp during the 80s. They had one of the best teams in the NFL, but they just didn't want to pay their players. If the book was true, it sounds like the organization had some pretty bad money problems that included shifting money around to cover checks. ED says the initial check that was cut to Jim Everett after the trade actually bounced.
And man, was ED underpaid. He signed a 4 year, 2 million contract with a 900K singing bonus. It turned out that 600K of that bonus was a forgivable loan, which was unforgiven after they traded him. He was obviously a top 3 RB (I think he was THE best) in the league at the time, but was barely in the top 10 salaries for RBs. Many RBs made around or over a million a year, and he didn't even make half of that. If he would've been taken care of and stayed, what could've been, as that offensive line was definitely one of the top, if not THE top offensive line in Rams history.
He mentions that one of his toughest losses as a Ram was the playoff loss to the Giants in 84. That Ram team could've given that 84 Niner team a serious run for their money, as they later did in 89 (in the regular season) without ED.
In the end, if ED somehow stayed a Ram, I think the Rams history would've been much different and could've included more Super Bowl titles.