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*** Official 2014 St. Louis Rams Thread *** (1 Viewer)

No more 10 yard cushions for Rams DB's. That was the dumbest scheme I have ever seen. Just imagine how much more pressure the Rams D-line would have got if the secondary would have played tighter coverage? They pretty much allowed QB's to hit the receivers with quick passes underneath all game long. Tight coverage + massive pass rush + relentless Williams blitzing = WOW

 
OTA notes. Britt flashing early.

http://espn.go.com/blog/nflnation/post/_/id/129473/observations-from-rams-practice

Observations from Rams' practice
By Nick Wagoner

EARTH CITY, Mo. -- The St. Louis Rams were the last team to jump into the fray of organized team activities. They officially began the work on Tuesday, but Thursday offered the first session open to the media.

As OTA practices go, Thursday's workout came with plenty of fireworks and much more to chew on. Here's what I took away from the day's work:

Scuffles abound: On an overcast day with cool temperatures, tempers ran hotter than one would expect, especially for a second OTA. There were three noticeable scuffles, one involving linebacker Alec Ogletree (his opponent was unrecognizable because the scrum happened too far away and was quickly broken up) that led coach Jeff Fisher to quickly stop practice and tell his team to cool down.

Upon getting back to work, receiver Kenny Britt promptly beat cornerback Janoris Jenkins for a touchdown of about 40 yards then did the same to Trumaine Johnson soon after. Britt let the young corners know about it and eventually it led to a full on fight between he and Johnson. Fisher again stopped practice but this time read his team the riot act with language not fit for print here but audible from about 100 yards away.

Fisher doesn't mind spirited, competitive practices but his message was clear.

"We have some rules we have to abide by and we have to learn to protect each other a little better," Fisher said. "It was very competitive. It started out early. Kenny caught those two deep balls in the 1-on-1s. That kind of got things going, but it was good."

Later, defensive end Michael Sam and running back Isaiah Pead quickly exchanged not-so pleasantries but heeded Fisher's words and quickly separated.

Speaking of Britt: As mentioned above, Britt's two long touchdown catches (both from Shaun Hill) and subsequent reactions spurred the scuffles, but let's not lose sight of the fact that he made those plays in the first place. Britt has an opportunity to start fresh and told reporters after practice that he's viewing this season like he's a rookie starting anew.

Britt is a big, physical player and has already been nicknamed "The Incredible Hulk" by some of his teammates. Clearly, he has some impressive physical skills but he's also a bit emotional. You can look at Britt beating Jenkins and Johnson for long catches and his past off-field issues however you choose, but if nothing else Britt brings an attitude and competitiveness on the practice field that should be a net positive for a young receiver group.

For what it's worth, Britt chose not to address the Instagram post which drew some attention during the draft, saying it is between he and his wife.

Sitting it out: Heading into the practice, we already knew that left tackle Jake Long and end William Hayes would not be practicing. Those two did indeed sit out the workout though they did a little in the individual drills at walkthrough pace.

Joining Long and Hayes on the sideline were quarterback Sam Bradford, running back Chase Reynolds and safeties Maurice Alexander and Christian Bryant. Bradford is expected to participate in Friday's OTA, at least during seven-on-seven. With no injury reports at this time of year, getting an answer on injured players is a difficult proposition but Alexander and Bryant did some work on the side and Reynolds appeared to be moving with a slight limp.

Center Scott Wells also wasn't present as he had an excused absence.

Line dance: With Long and Wells absent, the Rams had to adjust their line on the first day a bit. Sean Hooey filled in for Long at left tackle and Tim Barnes for Wells at center.

The rest of the line was as expected with Greg Robinson at left guard, Rodger Saffold at right guard and Joe Barksdale at right tackle. Wells is expected to return Friday but Long will be out beyond the OTAs.

But the Rams are clearly optimistic that Long will be ready sooner than later. Fisher said Long's target return is the middle of training camp. In the meantime, they don't appear to be in a rush to disturb Saffold or Robinson from their spots at guard.

“We want to go through OTAs and most of camp with players playing the position they’ll play in the opener," Fisher said. "You assume Jake comes back, so we’ll just plug someone else in out there.”

___________________________________________________________________

More on Britt.

http://msn.foxsports.com/midwest/story/he-s-loud-he-s-physical-he-s-hell-on-defenders-he-s-kenny-britt-060514

He's loud, he's physical, he's hell on defenders -- he's Kenny Britt
Nate Latsch

Kenny Britt needed a fresh start.

The St. Louis Rams needed an impact wide receiver.

Based on first glance during Thursday's OTA session at Rams Park, it appears that the marriage between Britt and the Rams will be good for both parties, though maybe not so much for the St. Louis cornerbacks trying to defend him in practice.

"Oh man, it's everything to me, to tell you the truth," Britt said of his fresh start after five seasons with the Tennessee Titans. "My mind's free. I'm relaxed right now. I'm taking this year as a rookie year, (like when) I first came into the league. That's my mind state right now."

Going into his sixth NFL season but still only 25, Britt showed Thursday that he can still make an impact on the football field. Well, as much as that's possible when the team goes helmets-only during an early June organized team activity.

The 2009 first-round pick out of Rutgers ran past starting cornerback Janoris Jenkins to haul in a touchdown pass down the left sideline. Then, a few minutes later, Britt ran past the Rams' other starting corner, Trumaine Johnson, for a touchdown pass down the right side of the field.

Britt punctuated that particular play with a celebratory spike and a scream of a not-fit-for-this-family-friendly website expletive.

A few minutes later, Britt and Johnson got into a shoving match that ended with both players on the ground and coach Jeff Fisher stopping the session to voice his disapproval of the extracurricular shenanigans.

Britt, who was probably the most vocal player on the field with trash talk but also with congratulating his teammates after big plays, said afterward that it was all part of competition between the players.

"We take that on the field, off the field, in the weight room, in the locker room," he said. "Guys love it. We're males out there and this is a man's game. That's one thing, when you come between those lines, you compete. When we go in the locker room, we're all brothers."

Though it's early, it looks like the Rams' new No. 81 is fitting in nicely.

With his offensive teammates, anyway.

The Rams did not take a wide receiver with any of their 11 selections in the draft last month, instead investing picks to upgrade the offensive and defensive lines, the secondary and at running back (Tre Mason) and quarterback (Garrett Gilbert, a developmental pick).

General manager Les Snead has said this offseason that he likes the five-receiver group of Tavon Austin (40 catches, 418 yards, six total TDs), Chris Givens (16.7 yards-per-catch average in his first two seasons), Austin Pettis (38 catches, 399 yards, four TDs), Stedman Bailey (17 catches, 226 yards, one rushing TD) and Brian Quick (18 catches, 302 yards, two TDs).

Signed to a one-year deal in late March, Britt offers a potential low-risk, high-reward option to add to the receiving corps, but it's difficult to know what kind of player the Rams are getting.

In his first two seasons, Britt looked like a breakout star.

He caught 42 passes for 701 yards and three touchdowns as a rookie in 2009 and followed it up with 42 catches for 775 yards and nine scores in just 12 games in 2010. He ranked sixth in the NFL with a 17.6 yards-per-catch receiving average over those two seasons.

But then came a run of injuries, including a knee injury, and off-the-field issues that seemed to derail his promising career.

In 12 games (three starts) in 2013, Britt totaled just 11 catches for 96 yards.

"It's hard," Britt said of the injuries. "My second year going through the hamstring problems, I missed (four) games. Then tearing my ACL. Then we know what happened after that. I'm not thinking about that. I'm just trying to get back to where I was before. I'm feeling healthy, I'm feeling strong and I feel like I'm young again."
Britt looked healthy Thursday.

If he can get back to the form he showed in his first two seasons, he'll be a big boost to a Rams offense that needs more playmakers to emerge on the perimeter.

"He's a very emotional kid," Fisher said Thursday. "He's an emotional receiver. He looks the part and he can make the plays. I was really happy to see him come on. He kept himself in really good shape during the free agency period. He came in, has done a great job inside. He's had no setbacks, feels great physically. He could potentially return to where he was, a very productive receiver."

Quarterback Sam Bradford already sounds like a fan of his new wideout.

"He's a big, explosive wide receiver who can make plays down the field," Bradford said. "He's looked good in his time here. I think just watching him and the energy that he comes onto the field with every day has been great. Not only for the offense, but for that wide receiving corps in general. I just feel like he brings kind of a presence and an energy that hasn't been there in the past."

RAMS NO. 1 PICK SETTLES IN AT NEW POSITION

Greg Robinson, the No. 2 overall pick in the draft, played left tackle the past two seasons at Auburn but will start out at left guard with the Rams, as expected.

That's where Robinson lined up with the starting unit Thursday, along with Joe Barksdale at right tackle and re-signed free agent Rodger Saffold at right guard.

Tim Barnes was at center, in place of veteran Scott Wells, and youngster Sean Hooey was at left tackle in place of veteran Jake Long, who is recovering from the ACL injury he suffered late last season.

"We want to go through OTAs and most of camp with players playing the position they'll play in the opener," Fisher said. "You assume Jake comes back, so we'll just plug someone else in out there."

MICHAEL SAM GETS IN A SCRAP

There will be a lot of eyes focused on rookie defensive end Michael Sam as he attempts to become the first openly gay football player in the NFL.

On Thursday, Sam got a little extra attention from teammate Isaiah Pead as the seventh-round pick and the reserve running back had a shoving match after one play. It wasn't nearly as intense as the tussle between Britt and Johnson, however.

 
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Rams spotlight turns to first-round picks (no Summer vacation for Donald and Robinson)

http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/no-summer-vacation-for-first-rounders-robinson-donald/article_8a3a8f47-04dd-5133-bebf-39fb60987cbf.html

Donald already impressing at Rams camp

http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/9850/donald-already-impressing-at-rams-camp

For fun, top rookie ratings in Madden '15 (Robinson tied first with Clowney, Donald tied sixth with Pryor and HCD)

http://www.easports.com/madden-nfl/news-updates-gameplay/article/rookie-player-ratings

 
Heard Donald looks amazing so far. Warren Sapp light. Playing next to mammoth Brockers, and having Quinn and Long on the edges, who are O's going to double team? Then throw in new DC Greg Williams, and the Rams D will be swarming like sailors on 2.00 BJ night.

 
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Nick Wagoner's Rams Chat Highlights: July 25

http://www.rams-news.com/nick-wagoners-rams-chat-highlights-july-25/

—The Robinson “Struggling” Story? Too much was made of that. Way too much. I wrote the story. I spoke to him for 15 minutes during OTAs and I found it refreshing how honest he was about the adjustment to the NFL. He’s changing positions and he’s learning an entirely different offense. That’s not easy. He’s a rookie who should be going into his junior year at Auburn. I’m not making any promises on how he pans out but he deserves a chance to learn.

—Battle for Starting Jobs? Honestly, things are a bit different this year in that I don’t see a lot of competition for starting spots. Now, the depth chart isn’t settled and there will be good battles toward the end of the roster but as for the starting 22, it seems fairly settled. I think wide receiver has some sorting to do though Austin and Givens will play a lot. After that, injury is the most likely thing to force a battle for a starting job.

—What Happened with Pead? I think it’s a combination of things, KJ, but much of it is from the immaturities you mentioned. He has won some of that back for his willingness to help on special teams but the problem is that he got passed up in the meantime.

—Honestly, the Rams should have done what they probably would have done if they hadn’t been worried about recouping the fifth round pick they’d traded for Brandon Lloyd. Which is stay where they were (at pick 45) and drafted LB Bobby Wagner. That’s not 20/20 hindsight, that’s the player they really liked and they moved down instead.

—Being vanilla in preseason is nothing new. I think that’s how most teams approach it. But based on who the Rams are trying to be offensively, it’s probably unwise to expect them to open up and be something that they aren’t. Last year was more of a difference from who they tried to be offensively in the opening four weeks. This year, if you see some relatively vanilla stuff in preseason it probably won’t be a major departure from what they become in the regular season.

—Does this team have A Chance at Playoffs? Does it have a chance? Yes, I believe it does. I don’t think it’s completely out of the realm of possibility it could be a playoff team. Especially if they have some luck in terms of health. The question for them is pretty simple, can they turn all that potential into production? It’s a bit unrealistic to think that all of those young players can do that but if enough do and they get a bounce or two, they could be right in the mix. I’m still tentatively going with 8-8 but I wouldn’t be shocked if they made a move.

—Dunbar? Based on the details that came out and the fact that he’s being charged with a misdemeanor, I tend to think he won’t be disciplined further but I also would be naive to even try to guess what the commissioner is going to do in terms of punishments with any player. I don’t think he’s the only run stopping LB on the roster but he’s definitely the most physical presence they have at the position. They still need much more from him than they got last year if he retains his starting job.

—Mason a Starter by Week 3/4? I don’t foresee that but I suppose it’s not out of the question. People have undersold the way Stacy attacked his offseason — perhaps I’m guilty of this as well — but he is in really good shape and really worked in the offseason to make himself better at picking up the blitz and catching passes out of the backfield. In other words, he’s more well rounded. Mason has a lot of work to do on some of those details before he can claim the job.

—Top 5 Defense? I think they have the pieces to be that but I need to see the secondary improve before I’m willing to take that bet. I will say this, if the defense is top five, this team’s chances of contending goes up dramatically. Since the offense is still such a question mark, having a top 5 defense can cover for a lot of holes. There’s a lot of talent on that side of the ball and there’s a lot of belief in Gregg Williams around here. My guess is that somewhere between 8-10 would be more realistic but top five isn’t out of the question.

—Benny Cunningham’s Role? It will be interesting to see where he falls. The Rams are high on him, more than many realize, but he’s also got stiff competition in Stacy, Mason and even Pead. It’d be good for him to win the kickoff return job as a jumping off point and then work his way into the mix on the offense.

—When Will Robinson Be Starting LT? I’d say probably two years from now but if Jake Long suffers another injury this year, maybe to start 2015.

—I’m not sold on the open competition talk. I know Schottenheimer said as much but that’s pretty common at that time of year. I do think Mason and Cunningham will push for carries but I’d be surprised if Stacy isn’t the starter barring injury.

—If there is a third QB spot, yes, I think it’s Gilbert’s to lose.

—I believe they are banking on the D-line to help cover up some of the warts that might exist in the secondary. It’s part of the aggressive approach of Gregg Williams where the corners don’t have to cover as long and the D-line can get home.

—First of all, Pointer is no longer on the roster. Rams didn’t bring him back. My early prediction (which I reserve the right to change) is that the CBs to make initial 53 are Jenkins, Johnson, Joyner, McGee and Gaines. I wouldn’t be surprised if they kept a sixth but for now, that’s my expectation.

—I fully expect Joyner to be the team’s primary nickel corner. Which means a lot of snaps.

—I expect Robinson to be a difference maker in the run game right away. As a pass protector, even at guard, it’s probably going to take him some time but you can tell all the physical tools are in place for him to have success and he’s got an excellent line coach guiding him.

—Honestly, none of the running backs stand out much in blitz pickup. They all need to be better there. As for receiving, I think that’s an area you could see Pead get some work this preseason and camp. Your thought that he’s the best might be correct so if he can handle it and show some chops there, it’s probably his best shot at some offensive snaps.

—Is Bradford the long term answer? I don’t think we know the answer to that question yet but we can all agree that this is the year we need to find out. But your point about handing it over to a rookie in year 3 of this program is right on. The Rams had no intention of starting a rookie at quarterback in the year they’ve been targeting for a breakout. It could undo all the work and time they’ve put in to getting the other young players much-needed experience.

—WR Explosion to Come? Explosion? Probably not. I just don’t see where any of these guys will have a monster, breakout season where they post 1,200 yards and a dozen touchdowns or something like that. But they also don’t necessarily need someone to do that, either. The offense isn’t built that way. If they could find a couple of guys to get to 800 yards or so, that would be progress and a good sign the offense is working how they hope it is. As for the spot opposite Givens and Austin, I think Britt is the favorite right now since Bailey isn’t available but let’s see how things go when the pads finally come on next week.

—I think they’d like to get Saffold as many reps as possible at his position — RG — but you bring up a solid idea. Why not use Saffold at LT when Bradford is in the game to ensure he’s protected during preseason. And yes, the Rams will pick and choose their spots with Bradford.

—Simply put, the Rams didn’t view Clinton-Dix as that type of player. He might have been the best safety in the draft but that doesn’t make him worth the 13th overall pick. Obviously, he ended up going a bit later so other teams felt the same. A ball hawking safety would be great for this team and that’s a position that could still use an upgrade but none of the safeties in this year’s draft seemed to qualify. Also, in Williams’ scheme, he seems to prefer bigger, more physical safeties.

—Even if Donald doesn’t technically start, I expect him to play and play a lot this year. As for others, Greg Robinson is the only other rookie I expect to start week 1. Joyner might technically start but as the nickel back.

—Sophomores to Make Big Jumps? I expect all of them to, actually. Bailey was the one I really believed in and his suspension was a big mistake because it could cost him a lot of opportunity but those three all showed signs that they just got better at their rookie seasons went on so I expect more from all of them in year 2. The Rams do also.

—Don’t put much stock in these “depth charts.” But yes, Austin will play outside more and move around quite a bit. That’s what he was doing when he found some success late in the season and it should continue as this year arrives.

—Jenkins? Consistency is the name of the game for him. He needs to figure out when it’s OK to take chances and when he needs to make the safe play. I’m curious to see how Gregg Williams’ aggressive coverage approach helps Jenkins. In theory, it seems to suit his game.

—Jenkins has had his share of off the field issues and I realize that what he puts out on social media may not be what fans want to see but one thing that has always struck me about Jenkins is his love for the game. Now, I have no idea how he spends his off seasons but work ethic has never been an issue with him.

—Best Shot at 1000 yd season at WR? I suppose my answer would be Givens but I don’t expect any of them to.

—Reid has an uphill climb to make the roster.

—Michael Sam? Looks faster than he did in spring but he said he lost 13 pounds in that time so that makes sense. Honestly, I don’t have many thoughts on Dungy’s comments. After he clarified the comments and put some context behind them, it seemed like he was saying what most were saying when the Oprah Network docu-series was in play. However, I’d greatly prefer if people stopped using the word distraction as some sort of catch all to keep from owning their feelings.

—Alexander has a lot of catching up to do so it’s probably not likely he jumps into anything just yet. But eventually, yes, I think that’s reasonable. And Fisher has been consistent in saying Joyner is most likely to be used as a nickel corner. He did some safety in the spring but only because of the injuries to other safeties.

—I think you have 8 D-linemen on the roster right now who are basically on the club. Then you have some intriguing guys for a possible ninth spot. Michael Sam, Ethan Westbrooks, even Deantre Harlan. That will be one of those fun battles to watch when we get into the third quarter of preseason games.

—The word elite should be reserved for the Peyton Mannings and Tom Bradys of the world. So no, I don’t expect Bradford to be an elite QB. But I think Bradford can be effective and the Rams can win with him under center.

—The Rams don’t view safeties as FS or SS so it might not matter. I think if McDonald and Alexander were on the field you’d see Williams do a lot of mixing and matching in their roles.

—I think if the Rams were in a different division, especially a few in the AFC, they’d be considered favorites to win it or go to the playoffs. They manhandled some good teams outside the NFC West last year. It’s unfortunate for them that they have to deal with the West but the good news is that they’ll be ready for anything when they don’t see Arizona, Seattle or San Francisco.

—Technically, aside from adding Joyner they did nothing in the secondary which would mean the answer is no. But they did bring in a new defensive coordinator and they made a good D line better which should help the secondary as well. And, like many positions, they are betting on improvement from their young players. There are reasons to think things will improve back there but a wait and see approach is warranted, in my opinion.

—Michael Sam? He’s going to have to earn it but there’s a path to the roster for him if he follows it. The Rams have kept nine DL under Fisher and Snead and they have eight spots pretty much sewn up. But that ninth spot is a battle amongst Sam and some undrafted rookie types. If he can do well on special teams and shows some pass rush potential, he could make it. It’s no guarantee, far from it, but it’s also not the long shot that some seem to believe.

—Rams have some openings for depth at linebacker but I think both players you mention (Millard & Shiller) will have to really show well on special teams to have a chance. Long shots.

—Wells has played fairly well (for the most part) when healthy but that has been rare. I think Wells is still in the driver’s seat for the job but another injury could obviously open the door.

—They are largely unproven on the OL behind the starters. Joseph should provide a solid backup. Tim Barnes has a little experience which should help. But otherwise, the Rams have guys like Jones, Washington, Person, Hooey, etc. who still have to prove themselves.

—Yes, Dunbar would likely handle MLB duties if JL got hurt. Rams would obviously miss Laurinaitis. He’s the leader of the defense and underrated in his role in terms of getting guys lined up and making sure everyone is on the same page.

 
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I was at Rams practice tonight and I am predicting Tre Mason to be a star. He just looks the part. Very fluid, good burst and lot's of wiggle. Also, Kenny Britt looks great. Britt has the size, speed and strength you look for. He is always smiling and having fun out there. He beat Jenoris Jenkins a couple times with his size. Tavon, Stedmon Bailey, Quick and Cook all look really good too. Cook is a monster, plain and simple. Ogletree is a stud too. Michael Brockers is a behemoth, and so is Greg Robinson. The Rams have a lot of high end talent on the roster for the first time in a long time. Bradford looked good too when he wasn't under pressure. Rams D-line is having its way with the o-line currently, but I'm sure they will be having their way with many o-lines this year. Robert Quinn is a freak of nature. Hall of fame talent.

 
STL to build their identity around the run. Many had already come to this conclusion based on the drafting of one of the most dominant run blockers in recent memory in Greg Robinson at 1.2 (with extremely raw pass pro skills), as well as Auburn teammate Tre Mason in the third round, one of the top RBs in the draft, who combined to power one of the strongest rushing attacks in the nation, ultimately propelling them all the way to the FBS Championship game. The below quotes by Fisher and Schottenheimer lend confirmation.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/rams-plan-rely-running-game-020049916--nfl.html

Rams plan to rely on running game in 2014
By JASON L. YOUNG

ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Regardless of how quarterback Sam Bradford's knee responds following an ACL tear and subsequent surgery during last season, the St. Louis Rams planned to lean heavily on their running game in 2014.

They still have to determine who gets the largest workload.

Second-year player Zac Stacy appears set for the top spot after leading the team in carries and yards as a rookie. The competition for his backup remains unsettled as the team closes in on the end of its second week of preseason training with an intrasquad scrimmage Saturday at the Edward Jones Dome.

''I feel with Sam, back healthy, looking good right now, there's going to be a little more balance,'' Stacy said after Friday's practice. ''It just goes back to the whole personnel we have in this offense.''

Stacy rushed 250 times for 937 yards in 2013, but the Rams struggled to find consistent balance between the running and passing games. About a month into the season, St. Louis began to run the ball more and, after Bradford tore his left anterior cruciate ligament Oct. 20 at Carolina, the running backs became the clear focus.

The Rams finished 19th in the league with 1,752 yards on 426 carries. Coach Jeff Fisher said he anticipates those numbers going up this year.

''We're going to be a run-oriented football team,'' he said. ''It's hard to gauge where it is right now. I'll have a better idea once we get into the preseason.''

The Rams used four running backs in 2013, the first without veteran Steven Jackson, who signed as a free agent with Atlanta following a nine-year stint in St. Louis. Fisher tends to carry four backs on his roster.

Benny Cunningham, in his second year, and Isaiah Pead, in his third, return and are likely backups for Stacy. Tre Mason, taken in the third round of this year's draft, is also in the mix for playing time. Daryl Richardson was waived in May despite being the third-leading rusher on the squad and has since signed with the New York Jets.

Cunningham finished with 261 yards on 47 carries, and Pead got seven attempts for 21 yards. Mason is coming off a junior year at Auburn in which he totaled 1,816 yards on 317 carries.

''There's a lot of competition here,'' Mason said. ''That's a good thing. It pushes other people to get better, but I feel like there's always a room to get better for everyone.''

After falling to 1-3 to start the 2013 season, St. Louis moved to a more run-heavy approach and it paid off quickly. The Rams dominated their next two games - albeit against Jacksonville and Houston, who finished with a combined six victories - before Bradford was lost for the season.

Offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer said the Rams should resemble more of what they showed after Bradford's injury.

''That's the way we're built,'' he said. ''We've always been built that way. Last year, early in the year, some things got away from us, but the shift to the running game is nothing new.

''That's what we're going to be based on: play great defense, run the football. Our play-action game comes off of that. The running game looks good. We've got a good, young stable of backs. I don't think I've ever been around a group of three, four, five guys with this much ability.''

Stacy had just one attempt in his first two games of his rookie season. He had no fewer than 12 the rest of the way, including a season high of 33 in a victory over Tampa Bay.

He said any surprise element he and the other young Rams had last year against teams is likely gone. Though, given the other options Bradford has at his disposal, Stacy said that might work to the running game's advantage.

''Teams may load the box a little more this year,'' he said. ''But with the playmakers we have on the outside, it should open it up.''

 
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Are the Rams headed for a 2010 Jets season?

I hope the passing game can be a little better than that but I envision a lot of running for the Rams.

 
Are the Rams headed for a 2010 Jets season?

I hope the passing game can be a little better than that but I envision a lot of running for the Rams.
I can't decide how I think they'll run their O... I traded for Bradford as my backup QB last season because it looked like they were gearing up for a spread attack... then Bradford got hurt, and Clemens "lead" their offense, which is to say he tried to convert 3rd downs as the Rams ran ran ran the ball... and this approach kept them in games.

I think that rushing success despite the terrible situation kind of reinforced Jeff Fisher's natural inclination to run the ball. So instead of selling high on Zac Stacy like I was leaning towards doing in May, I think I'm holding him with the expectation that he gets 300 carries and 10+ TDs.

 
I wonder if there is any chance the Rams bite the bullet and trade for one of the Eagles backup QB's?

I am a Cowboys fan and I would be willing to trade Romo. :cool:

 
One positive is Quick - He has definitely turned the corner . . .

I don't know what happened to Britt. He didn't play much.

 
Robert Quinn reportedly signed a 4 year extension through 2019, for $66 million ($41.2 million guaranteed), with details TBA.

Also, Stedman Bailey could be back sooner than game 5 once the new drug policy is agreed on.

 
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Davis was the first Rams QB to win his first career start since 12-30-02.

Broke an NFL record 12 straight road opener losses.

Davis looked more prepared, he was poised, accurate and made some clutch throws to extend drives.

McDonald had a blocked punt and FG, and also had the hit on Evans at the end of the game that triggered the obscure 10 second run off rule.

Schottenheimer actually called a good game.

The light appears to have come on for Quick, with another 7 receptions (though he had a bad downfield whiff, but it would have been a high point split on double team coverage and a big time play).

 
The St. Loo defense is sitting on my waiver wire. What's wrong with them, and can they fix it?

They were supposed to have this hellish pass rush, but the sacks aren't there and they are giving up a boatload of points.

 
I don't know what's wrong with St. L D but they were on my WW as well and I picked them up in both leagues they were. I think they have too much talent to suck all year.

 
What the hell happened to this team?

Lost 5 in a row. Fired the OC. Foles tanked. Top 3 defensive line. And Gurley is running over defenses.

I thought they were going places (playoffs, not L.A. btw).

 
DE Robert Quinn and SS T.J. McDonald out for the season.

http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/ram-notebook-de-quinn-s-mcdonald-are-out-for-rest/article_71bf7267-f3f8-5d43-a323-bde2db75fdd8.html



On LT Greg Robinson's struggles for those interested in blocking fundamentals and technique.

http://www.lbolineperformance.com/greg-robinson-block-report/

I'm going to coin a new word, *DESURGENCE* (to designate and signify the opposite of resurgence) for the state of the Rams offense.

http://www.ramsrule.com/herd/read.php?5,619616,619616#msg-619616

Former Rams TE positional coach Rob Boras replaced the fired OC Frank Cignetti on Monday.

http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/rams-boras-diving-into-new-coordinator-duties/article_6d8b19f8-55c1-5c3b-a727-5914f732f548.html

If the seasons ended today, the Rams would draft seventh overall (worst since Fisher's first year in '12, when they flipped the second overall pick - they traded up to 1.8 for Tavon Austin in '13), includes draft needs for all 32 teams.

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000551301/article/2016-nfl-draft-order-and-needs-for-every-team

 
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HC Jeff Fisher's next loss will tie him with Don Shula for the third most in league history (taking Fisher only about two decades what took Shula nearly a third of a century) - ten more losses would be the most ever.

 

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