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RamView, 9/3/2009: Rams 17, Chiefs 9 (Long)

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  • RamView, 9/3/2009: Rams 17, Chiefs 9 (Long)

    RamView, September 3, 2009
    From Row HH
    (Report and opinions from the game.)
    Preseason Game #4: Rams 17, Chiefs 9

    The St. Louis Rams – 2009 Missouri state champs! But more important than that, believe it or not, were the final intrasquad contests, at nearly every position. RamView will now take on the daunting task of breaking down those battles while not detracting from the historical nature of the Rams bringing the storied Governor’s Cup back east…

    * QB: Whoever won the fight at third QB tonight didn’t do it by knockout. Brock Berlin (9-17-97) probably had the better night, despite a bad interception deep in the Rams’ own end in the 2nd. Berlin underthrew what was supposed to be a quick out for Daniel Fells. Hard to believe he didn’t see DaJuan Morgan out there, so I’m assuming the throw was worse than the decision was. Berlin played the second quarter and led the Rams on an earlier TD drive, making several nice throws along the way. After being robbed of a 33-yard TD pass thanks to Derek Stanley’s brutal drop, he hit Nate Jones on the sideline at the 6 with a 27- yard pass, and shortly after, drilled a pass to Fells in traffic at the goal line for the go-ahead TD. Berlin’s engineered some TD drives this summer; his ability to finish drives has to work in his favor. Keith Null (9-17-78) auditioned the whole second half, hitting only one long throw of note, as 23-yarder to Sean Walker. Null didn’t show a lot of touch on what you’d have to call classic WCO throws. Several of the five-yard slant-variety throws he made were high, hard ones his receiver couldn’t handle. Easy there, hoss. Null also fumbled on a completely-blown running play and walked right into a sack in the 4th. Tonight’s starter was actually Kyle Boller (3-4-24), who barely broke even if you take away the 18 yards he lost on just two sacks. I have no idea what the decision’s going to be at QB. Taking the snap from center, having to deal with blitzes, Null hasn’t looked ready to run the offense the last couple of weeks. Yeah, about as ready as Berlin was to play in Cincinnati a couple of years ago. And Steve Spagnuolo’s last team in New York wasn’t that concerned about entering recent seasons without much experience at third string, like Andre Woodson or Hefty Lefty Lorenzen, both 7th-round picks iirc. The guess here is that Berlin’s really going to wish he had that interception back. Waiver bait: Berlin.

    * RB: The muddle behind Steven Jackson on the depth chart got even more muddled when Samkon Gado (6-17) left the game due to a rib injury. And even more muddled because the other backs didn’t make much of their golden ticket. Antonio Pittman (3-3) made a couple of nice blitz pickups but didn’t find much running room. Kenneth Darby (3-14) weaved through the middle nicely a couple of times. Chris Ogbannaya (12-41) got extensive work in the 2nd half. He popped a couple of 10-yard runs early but spent the rest of the game mostly running into pileups at the line. His field vision still seems a work in progress; he seemed to have many lanes or opportunities to bounce a play outside that he just didn’t see. Or when he did see them, he was a step late getting to them and couldn’t take advantage. My guess? Obie needs to use the force. He’s thinking too much. If he plays a little more instinctively, he’ll break off more long runs. Ahead of him? I have no idea again, especially with Gado’s injury clouding the waters. Darby ran better tonight, and has added advantages over Pittman as a receiver and a kick returner. But as at QB, I won’t be surprised if I’m completely wrong here. Waiver bait: Pittman, FB Jerome Johnson.

    * WR: Besides Donnie Avery (0-0) taking the field for 10-12 snaps, the most notable development in the receiving corps was Ronald Curry locking down a roster spot with 3 catches for 40 yards. He showed some moves after the catch and that he can find the soft spots underneath the zone. Derek Stanley (3-23) completely blew what should have been a TD catch in the 2nd by letting the ball get into his body, but helped make his case later with a determined run through a tackle on an end around or a first down. And he’s the likely punt returner. The wideout merry-go-round probably stops there, though. Tim Carter (2-10), who was here on a flyer anyway, hasn’t made a whole lot happen and failed to make a couple of catches tonight, though he was hit heavily on both. Sean Walker (2-37) and Nate Jones (1-27) each made nice longer plays but have never cracked the higher echelons of the depth chart. Daniel Fells had a tough TD catch of a Berlin fast ball, while Randy McMichael missed more blocks tonight, had a lot of trouble with Mike Vrabel, and really needs to stop disappointing me. Waiver bait: Carter and TE Eric Butler; practice squad: Walker and probably Jones.

    * Offensive line: Rams Nation was probably more worried about pass protection than run blocking heading into training camp, but the Rams only netted 2.2 yards a rush attempt tonight and really have to do a better job of taking over the line of scrimmage. Doesn’t really matter to me that Richie Incognito was out, either. You can fall down for 2 yards a rush. The Rams have to do better. Starting line was Smith and Barron at the tackles, Goldberg and Bell at guard, Brown at center. Smith, later joined by McMichael, had a ton of trouble with Tamba Hali and Mike Vrabel over on the right side. Hali went through Smith like he wasn’t even there for a sack that killed the Rams’ second drive. The first play of the game was a sack of Boller that lost 12, with Chiefs pouring up the middle on what I can only guess was meant to be a screen pass, judging from the way Boller held on to the ball. Gado even made a hard hit to pick up one of the blitzers, but to no avail. I have difficulty blaming the line for the third sack; Null unalertly stepped up right into that. Smith settled down and played better than early on when Hali beat him consistently, but his better play (some at LT) was not against starters. If they start him against Seattle, Boller will be stepping in for Bulger before the first quarter’s over. Waiver bait: T Eric Young, C Tim Mattran, T Renardo Foster. Practice squad: T Phil Trautwein, G Roy Schuening, G Roger Allen. Schuening’s the 4th pure guard, and with Goldberg and Setterstrom able to move inside in a pinch, he’s really down in the numbers game. Trautwein’s been getting in ahead of Foster; if the Rams do go with a ninth lineman, I think it would be him.

    * Defensive line / LB: The defense won ugly again tonight. The first unit pass rush did nothing whatsoever and the defense failed badly several times in golden field position, giving up huge plays. They made up for most of it though, by winning the turnover battle again and keeping Kansas City out of the end zone. Victor Adeyanju already had a job but put it in stone with one of the night’s top defensive performances. His hard hit sacking Brody Croyle in the 2nd was one of the highlights of the night. He pressured the pocket well and played like his hair was on fire. The sack was a huge play, too, coming on 3rd down in the red zone and forcing a FG. The other sack was by C. J. Ah You (or as D’Marco Farr says, Au Jus), who won himself a job tonight. The sack punctuated a 3-and-out in the 2nd, and he forced a FG when he missed a sack but still got up to chase Croyle out of bounds on 3rd down. He consistently pressured the pocket, like he’s done all summer. Eric Moore had the unfortunate timing of having a quieter game and getting hurt late (broken hand). The defense needed to make the big plays to force FGs that they did because they gave up several HIDEOUS long plays. Punts pinned the Chiefs deep inside their 10 THREE times and the defense blew them ALL, and badly. A 40-yard pass to Sean Ryan from the Chief 13 was followed by a 41-yard Larry Johnson run. The Johnson run was against a zone blitz – you see Chris Long back-pedal at the start of the play and get picked off by a lineman well out of his DE position to create a big hole, with David Roach following with his best Mike Furrey impression. Dantrell Savage got the Chiefs off their 2-yard line with a SEVENTY yard run in the 2nd. Teams are supposed to STUFF runs in that part of the field, let alone get gashed for SEVENTY. Savage ran right by Adam Carriker, who grabbed him while being blocked and didn’t appear to realize he had the ball. Quincy Butler’s horrible missed tackle then really sent Savage to the races. The Chiefs’ 2:00 offense got from their 6 to across midfield in just three plays, but time ran out on them and preserved the Rams’ lead. I iso’ed a lot on Carriker tonight and was almost completely unimpressed. He played the second quarter and got double-team attention early, but also couldn’t get any penetration one-on-one against either Mike Goff or Brian Waters. I think what barely saves his job is that he was able to split some double-teaming late in the quarter and put some pressure on the passer, and Antwan Burton had a quiet game against lesser competition. The third-string linebackers probably outplayed the second string. Dominic Douglas broke up a pass to save a TD late in the game, while Chamberlain got burned on that long TE pass. Waiver bait: Moore (sorry), DE Ian Campbell, LBs Quinton Culberson, K.C. Asiodu. Practice squad: Douglas. IR: Carriker, since late word says he has a “serious” shoulder injury. That would save Burton a pink slip.

    * Secondary: David Roach’s name shows up in all the Rams’ worst plays tonight. TE Sean Ryan beat Chris Chamberlain badly downfield, with Roach late to close from safety, for a 40-yard gain in the first. Roach missed a diving tackle on Johnson’s long run and got squashed like a bug by a downfield block on the Savage run. But his worst play was a 40-plus yard bomb to Ashley Lelie in the second half. His reaction on the play was terrible; Lelie had already turned and practically signaled a fair catch on the underthrown long ball before Roach even figured out what was going on. Roach is practice squad material because he’s played hard and made a few good plays. NFL.com scores him with forcing the Quentin Lawrence fumble in the 3rd. But WAY too many mistakes. Quincy Butler had to atone for his terrible missed tackle on the long Savage run, and he did with interest, making the play he’s been making all preseason on passes out in the flat, jumping the route, picking off the pass and returning to the house. VINTAGE QUINCY BUTLER! That pick put the Rams ahead 14-9. Justin King helped make it 17-9 later with an acrobatic, one-handed catch on a just-STUPID falling shot put of a throw by Tyler Thigpen. The radio broadcast mentioned, and I agree with, the idea that the move to dump Tye Hill earlier this week sparked the rest of the secondary’s play. Also credit Bradley Fletcher and Todd Johnson for tracking down Savage and LJ on their long runs. Waiver bait: Mark Rubin; practice squad: Roach.

    * Special teams: Though the defense never took advantage, Donnie Jones was a lethal weapon, with punts downed at the 1, 2, and 6, while still averaging 47.6 a shot. His clutch 61-yard rocket down to the Chief 6 late in the 4th quarter proved key to keeping them off the board. Josh Brown hit a short FG but was visibly pissed earlier in the game when Spagnuolo sent in the punting team in lieu of letting him try a 54-yarder. Coverage was much more effective than last week. Chief returners basically got nowhere. Cord Parks did all the returns but was nothing special, though I do like that he heads immediately upfield on punt returns. Practice squad: Parks.

    * Coaching: Tonight showed more reasons to have optimism in the Steve Spagnuolo regime. For instance, he lets his coordinators call the plays and stays out of their way. Contrast that with fellow rookie head coach Todd Haley of the Chiefs, who just fired his OC and is now his team’s head coach, offensive coordinator AND QBs coach. That’s way too many hats, and all the goofy quasi-psycho intense glares on the sideline won’t fix that. There was a spot tonight when Haley the head coach should have been challenging a play – the Lawrence fumble stood a good chance of being overturned if reviewed – but instead, Haley the OC was over on the bench meeting with the offense. Spagnuolo knows his role, and looks to be free of the I-have-to-do-everything hubris that catches many new head coaches. It caught Scott Linehan and it’s certain to catch Haley.

    Another thing to like about the Rams coaching staff is that things that go wrong one week tend to get fixed the next. Ten penalties last week; just four tonight. Awful punt coverage last week; every punt return shut down tonight. The backs couldn’t pick up the blitz in New York to save their lives; they’ve picked blitzes up pretty well ever since. There’s no “shoot, we’ll fix that” going on here – they just get it fixed.

    The zone blitz actually worked early tonight, on the first third down of the game where Jonathan Wade shot in to blow up a Jamaal Charles run. But it also got burned big on the long Larry Johnson run, and I ask again: what is the infatuation with dropping Chris Long into pass coverage? Pat Shurmur rolled out a little bit of Wildcat formation tonight, though the play turned out just to be a bland run up the middle for Gado. Gained 5, though.

    Does the coaching staff have this team ready for the regular season? Something else I don’t know. The lack of pass rush and the gashing big plays would say no. Keeping the opponent out of the end zone and winning the turnover battle again, though, speak better to their readiness. Also figure in the lack of intensity of the fourth preseason game and the many Rams players who sat out, and we’re not really going to learn much about the team’s readiness until the regular season starts in Seattle in 10 days.

    * Waiver bait: Quick review of my cut projections (20 instead of 21, expecting an IR on Carriker) – 1) Berlin, 2) Pittman, 3) Jerome Johnson, 4) Tim Carter, 5) Eric Butler, 6) Eric Young, 7) Mattran, 8) Foster, 9) Eric Moore, 10) Asiodu, 11) Culberson, 12) Rubin. Practice squad: 1) Sean Walker, 2) Nate Jones, 3) Schuening, 4) Roger Allen, 5) Trautwein, 6) Douglas, 7) Roach, 8) Parks. Immediate disclaimer: I’m expecting to have a bad year projecting cuts; this has been one of the least predictable years in memory, with many close contests.

    * Upon further review: Folks who saw the game on TV can correct me, but I thought the Carl Cheffers crew would have had significant calls overturned on replay. The replay official seemed to be asleep at the switch. It’s hard to believe Fells’ TD, which came right after the first half 2:00 warning, wasn’t challenged by the booth. Wasn’t that apparent to me or the Rams radio crew that he got in. Looked like Lawrence could easily have been down before his fumble, but Haley wasn’t really paying attention to challenge it. And it looked very much like Carter actually possessed and then fumbled a pass to him that was ruled incomplete. If the crew actually got three pivotal bang-bang plays right, then more power to them. They certainly looked open to question to me. Grade: D+.

    * Cheers: The gameday experience at the Dome continues to improve. The primary game clock has been moved back up to the middle of the top “ribbon”, where it is much bigger and easier to find and read than it was in a couple of weeks ago in the lower position. A lot of fans mentioned they had trouble with the location of the game clock last game; sounds like our objections were heard. And a correction from last home game – the out-of-town scoreboard shows five games at a time. The halftime show was pee-wee football again this week; the national anthem was sung by a Ron Jeremy look-alike who gamely fought through microphone problems. And befitting the big event atmosphere of the Governor’s Cup game, the actual governor of Missouri was at the game to award the Rams the hallowed trophy. Unintentional comedy moment of the night came on radio pregame when Jim Hanifan enthused that the Rams had gotten a second round pick for Tye Hill. He was pretty disappointed after being informed that it was actually a seventh round pick. All that segment was missing was Emily Littella saying “Never mind!”

    * Who’s next?: The Seattle Seahawks have beaten the St. Louis Rams EIGHT straight times. I’ve said more than once that this has to be the least-deserved winning streak in sports. Two of the wins were by game-ending FGs. One came courtesy of Gus Frerotte’s crap luck. A 4-12 team doesn’t deserve to beat anybody twice in one season, yet Seattle did just that to the Rams last year. Now the Rams get the unwelcome chore of opening the 2009 season at Dopily-Spelled Telecom Company Field, where Seattle went 33-7 from 2003-2007, to try to break this streak, and the wills of 67,000 screaming fans.

    Will the 2009 Seahawks be more like the 2007 team (10-6), or 2008 (4-12)? Seattle fans have reason to hope the former. The 29th-rated passing offense of last year should get a nice bump back up the ratings. Matt Hasselbeck’s back after missing over half of last season, and a team that took the field some weeks missing its first SEVEN options at wideout looks healthy now, with Nate Burleson back, joined by one of the offseason’s bigger acquisitions in T.J. Houshmandzadeh. Judging from Seattle’s personnel at RB, though, they must have picked 10th in the fantasy league this year. Edgerrin James may start, and if it’s not Edge, it’s Julius Jones (who’s certainly had his moments against the Rams), with quietly-dangerous Justin Forsett as the third-down back. (Watch the screen!) Rams fans, though, have reason for hope of their own, because the Seabird offensive line is in more flux than the Obama healthcare plan. They’ll be missing as many as three starters on the line. Center Chris Spencer is out, though replacement Steve Vallos is fairly capable. They’ll have a rookie, Max Unger, at RG. And regular LT/legend Walter Jones missed the preseason because of knee surgery. He’ll either be rusty (think Orlando Pace against the Broncos last Sunday), or more likely, on the bench in favor of Shaun Locklear. And Seattle would be better off with Heather Locklear at LT, because defenders would at least slow down to check her out on their way to the QB and might not drill Hasselbeck as hard. This is an offensive line meant to be exploited by an attacking defense. If the Rams are who we think they are, this should be like leaving a raw steak out for a Rottweiler. It should get devoured.

    That goes both ways, though. The Seattle pass rush has had spectacular success against the Ram o-line in the past. Darryl Tapp’s matching up on either Adam Goldberg, who’s too slow to keep up with him, or Jason Smith, who I don’t think is ready for him. Patrick Kerney’s spent a lot of his career in the Rams backfield. LeRoy Hill is a proven (and well-paid) threat to Rams QBs and RBs alike. Their defense should be solid up the middle, with pocket-crusher Brandon Mebane, free agent/widebody acquisition Colin Cole and Lofa Tatupu backing the big men up. And we’ll get early indications on how good or bad a choice the Rams made to pass on Aaron Curry in the draft. Seattle’s a fast, attacking front that has given the Rams worse fits than Brandon Marshall in training camp over the years. One hopes the Rams can counterattack with Steven Jackson running behind Smith/Goldberg, to at least keep Tapp off balance. The Seahawk secondary is quite weak if the Rams give their QB enough time to attack it. Their overall D was 30th in the league because their pass defense came in dead last. They intercepted very few passes, while rating as one of the league’s worst teams in allowing 20- and 40-yard completions. And the hot question in Seattle isn’t whether Marcus Trufant will miss the opener, it’s whether he will be put on injured reserve due to a bad back. I’d like to see Donnie Avery get a bunch of shots next Sunday, and I don’t mean swine flu. Or Jagermeister.

    The home of Microsoft is a fitting place for the rollout of the latest version of the St. Louis Rams. The Rams coaching staff has put in the overtime and implemented their design. Have they worked out enough of the bugs? Will Rams 2009 run smoothly on the Seattle platform, or will the Seahawks greet them with the blue screen of death? I’m the incurable optimist right now; I think the Rams have a good shot at breaking Seattle’s streak next Sunday. But we’ll all have to log on then and find out.

    --Mike
    Game stats from nfl.com

  • #2
    Re: RamView, 9/3/2009: Rams 17, Chiefs 9 (Long)

    Thanks, as always, Mike.
    The more things change, the more they stay the same.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: RamView, 9/3/2009: Rams 17, Chiefs 9 (Long)

      Wow that's a lot of information.

      1. I think Foster is a better prospect than Trautwein. Trautwein might get it though just because he is younger. Mattran and Young are both horrible.

      2. I agree with you on McMichael, his blocking didn't help Boller out at all. That was scary bad.

      3. Seattle is going to be a major uphill battle. No cohesion on an offensive line that is struggling already, Bulger will be rusty, Avery is still learning and Jackson will be running behind that line looking for holes. Without a lot of depth, I'm afraid this defense is going to just wear down as the games roll on because our offense is going to struggle.

      With this offensive line, expect a lot of "Jackson needs to stop dancing around behind the line and just hit the hole" complaints, ignoring the fact no holes exist.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: RamView, 9/3/2009: Rams 17, Chiefs 9 (Long)

        Let's hope the extended rest for Cogs, Little, Karney, Avery,and Bulger has helped their recuperation enough for them to contribute as we know they need to for the Rams to be successful against the Hags.

        I actually think the preseason performance by the rotational DL this year and simply unleashing a healthy and full TC-prepped SJ for a whole game gives them a good chance if it's competitive at the start of the 4th qtr. That's a seachange from last year,imo. Even when we held a lead going down the stretch, I never felt we were likely to pull away, always looking over the shoulder.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: RamView, 9/3/2009: Rams 17, Chiefs 9 (Long)

          Mike,

          Non-game question.

          Is that an ampitheater across the highway from the dome? Whatever it is, it looks like it took away the best tailgating area that the dome had. I wish I could commit to the Bash to get a look myself.

          gap

          Comment

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          • MFranke
            RamView, 8/27/2009: Rams 24, Bengals 21 (Long)
            by MFranke
            RamView, August 27, 2009
            From The Couch
            (Report and opinions on the game.)
            Preseason Game #3: Rams 24, Bengals 21

            The Rams took a hard knock early from the stars of Hard Knocks, but rode the turnover wave again to bounce back for their second preseason victory, and bounce back from last week’s tough loss. Overcoming their flaws tonight with opportunism and resiliency, this team’s showing the character Steve Spagnuolo’s trying to instill in them. They’re far from perfect, but unlike the last two seasons, they’re playing like believers.

            * QB: It was a nice night to be Kyle Boller (14-20-96, 1 TD), as he led a long TD drive in the 1st to reset the team’s momentum from a poor start. Boller showed fine poise in the pocket, nice mobility I should have given him more credit for last week, and good accuracy on most of his passes. It helped that everything was to the middle of the field this week instead of the more difficult outside throws Boller’s been struggling with. But it helped more that he made critical plays during the two TD drives he led. A screen to Steven Jackson with a blitz coming converted a 2nd-and-long, and again later with a Bengal bearing down on him, Boller found Ronald Curry on 3rd-and-7 to keep the 1st TD drive alive. Boller kept the 2nd TD drive afloat with clutch play, a tough 2nd-down scramble followed by a bullet slant pass to Laurent Robinson for a first down at the Bengals 5. Factor in 2 or 3 drops by his receivers, and Boller had as good a night as you could want him to have, especially since it left out those difficult deep throws that vexed him last week. The QB3 battle, meanwhile, has turned into an unpretty war of attrition, with neither of the back-benchers showing much tonight. Brock Berlin was 2-5-21 in the 3rd, and in the 4th, Keith Null (1-4-24) suddenly turned into 2000 Rick Ankiel, making high, wild throws and looking little like a player who had developed into one of the surprises of training camp. Even his one completion was a dubious play, a ball unwisely chucked into coverage but caught by Sean Walker across midfield. Not sure what made Null so uncomfortable tonight – less work from the shotgun? Bengal blitzing? But he looked as bad making sideline throws as Boller did last week, and the clash at QB3 is going to come down to a tiebreaker next week.

            * RB: What does Steven Jackson (5-12) have in common with the President of the US? They both get a LOT of August off. Jackson had just 6 touches tonight, most of them handoffs with no room to run where he got stuffed. He had one 10-yard run, but a key play of the first TD drive was a 2nd-and-11 screen pass where he hurdled a tackler and scooted for the 1st. Samkon Gado (5-33) stepped in that same drive at RB2 and loudly announced “I’d like to keep this job, please,” with a 9-yard power run and a 16-yard cutback run for a TD that put the Rams back in the game. Also helping Gado keep RB2: Antonio...
            -08-28-2009, 12:54 PM
          • MFranke
            RamView, 8/14/2009: Rams 23, Jets 20 (Long)
            by MFranke
            RamView, August 14, 2009
            From The Couch
            (Report and opinions on the game.)
            Preseason Game #1: Rams 23, Jets 20

            Last year's disastrous preseason opener led to a disaster of a season. With tonight's game, Rams fans can hope the team has put a lot of 2008 behind it. Compare the first preseason games. Winning 23-20 instead of losing 34-13? I'll take it. Giving up 102 yards on the ground instead of 343? I'll definitely take it. The offense that settles for too many field goals and still doesn't protect Marc Bulger adequately? We'll have to wait on that. But this year's Rams are starting off on the right foot, instead of shooting themselves in it.

            Position by position:
            * QB: Marc Bulger (4-4-77) played about a quarter and a half, and when his teammates protected him, he looked sharp and threw accurately, including as good a pass as he's thrown as a pro, a 50-yard bomb he dropped right into Laurent Robinson's breadbasket in the 2nd. Protection problems, though, got Bulger sacked a startling three times and forced the offense to settle for 3 FGs. Kyle Boller got about a quarter but was pressured into an underwhelming 3-9-25 performance, relying a lot on bootlegs and swing passes. Brock Berlin was 6-8-27 but had a short night, spraining a knee while getting dragged down at the end of a naked bootleg by Zach Potter. The most impressive QB off the bench may have been Keith Null (2-2-16). After Berlin's injury rushed him into play, the Rams got a composed and ultimately game-winning play from the rookie. Sean Walker lined up wrong with the Rams at the Jet 14, but instead of blowing a timeout, Null got Walker lined up correctly before the snap and wound up exploiting a mismatch with a LB and hitting Walker for the go-ahead TD. Berlin'd better be wary or he'll get Wally Pipped. Or is that Trent Greened?

            * RB: Steven Jackson had just a couple of carries and was pulled from the game after a 13-yard gain late in the first. The competition for the spots behind Jackson got more heated when Samkon Gado (6-93) started the second half by exploding up the middle and running through the Jet secondary for a 77-yard TD. Antonio Pittman's (4-36) getting plenty of chances and still looks like the Rams' most elusive back. He bounced a run outside for 20 and forced a fumble on special teams to enhance his chances. Unfortunately, the biggest competition between the RBs tonight was to see who could pick up blitzes the worst. Jackson didn't get a block on the blitzing safety, helping LB David Harris score a sack to shut down the Rams' opening drive. Chris Ogbannaya (9-29) let Kenwin Cummings go right by him and drop Berlin for a huge loss in the 4th. The big winner(?), though, was Kenneth Darby (6-16), who looked far worse in blitz protection tonight than he ever did last season. He let a DB go right around him, creating pressure that led to Calvin Pace getting the Jets' second sack. The third came...
            -08-15-2009, 02:30 AM
          • MFranke
            RamView, 8/21/2009: Falcons 20, Rams 13 (Long)
            by MFranke
            RamView, August 21, 2009
            From Row HH
            (Report and opinions from the game.)
            Preseason Game #2: Falcons 20, Rams 13

            Preseason is easy to overreact to; trust me, I'm an expert at it. The Rams definitely showed flaws, some painfully familiar, while getting overpowered by the Falcons tonight. But just as those weren't the 1999 Rams who won in New York last week, those weren't the 2007-08 Rams last night. While not ignoring the minuses, we'll be better off heeding the timeless words of Allen Iverson. We're talking about practice!

            Position by position:
            * QB: Now that I know Kyle Boller is dating former Miss California Carrie Prejean, who joins a list that includes Tara Reid and Petra Nemcova, all I can think now when I see him is, “Stoney Case”. If Boller (9-16-91) was as rusty in the singles scene as he was on the field tonight, he'd be dating Madeline Albright. Boller was about as accurate as a rookie weatherman at times. Most of his sideline passes were adventures. At least two of them should have been picked off. Laurent Robinson was open by a good couple of yards for what should have been a 40-yard TD in the 2nd, and Boller threw a bomb out of bounds that the WR couldn't even get to. He had Randy McMichael open by a mile on a dig route deep in Atlanta territory in the 2nd and threw the pass into the ground, short of him by yards. He had Keenan Burton open on one sideline pass, pumped, then had to roll out Burton's direction and throw him the pass on the comeback, that way he could get it out there. Yikes. I understand Boller's coming off shoulder surgery, and that he had men in his face on some of his throws, but everybody else understand that we're going to miss Marc Bulger if he stays hurt. A lot. I'll try to account for Boller's rust and that we've been spoiled by pinpoint-accurate throwers like Bulger and Kurt Warner for a decade. But Boller's numbers on the night were inches from being Ryan Leaf-quality. Speaking of Leaf, his protege Keith Null (6-9-56) had a pretty nice 4th quarter, though Null should look good in the 2:00 drill; that's basically his college offense. Null was accurate, threw the ball into some tight spots, showed a sweet play fake, and ran the offense and stood tall in the pocket with poise. He drove the Rams right down the field from their 35 toward the tying TD before Sean Walker got knocked off his route on a 4th-down blitz, and Null's spot pass for him was intercepted in the end zone. But it looks more and more like the kid's got “it”. That may be a bad thing for Brock Berlin (5-8-71), though he didn't have a bad 3rd quarter. His TD pass to Derek Stanley was a suh-weet throw. He couldn't keep the momentum going, though, taking a sack the next possession despite having plenty of time to throw and Jerome Johnson out in the flat lonelier than a pork chop at a vegan buffet. Thank you! I'll be here all week. So will Berlin, though thanks to Null's emergence, I'm...
            -08-22-2009, 10:40 AM
          • MFranke
            RamView scrimmage report: 8/7/2009
            by MFranke
            RamView, August 7, 2007
            Team Scrimmage Report from Lindenwood College


            Hey, St. Louis may have figured out it's time for some football. A capacity crowd of 7,000 watched tonight as the Rams locked horns with one another in the closest atmosphere to a live game they've seen so far this preseason. The problem is, I'm not really sure exactly what we all learned tonight. The Rams might have answers right now to a couple of their myriad issues, but there are still an awful lot of questions left blank thus far on their 2009 NFL entrance exam.

            Position by position:

            * QB: Marc Bulger looked solid enough, though I'm not ready to proclaim he's “back” like they just did on the 10 o'clock news. The short passing game clicked and Bulger especially made some nice throws into tight spaces. He found Keenan Burton and Donnie Avery downfield a couple of times and is still working really well with Randy McMichael. He was picked off from the goal line by Quincy Butler on an attempted out route to Laurent Robinson. Butler really jumped that route, so I'm not sure if Bulger's throw was the problem there. At least I hope not. That wasn't Bulger's only INT, though; Craig Dahl picked off a deep throw to end the offense's first two-minute drill. Nobody inspired much confidence behind Bulger. Kyle Boller was under pretty good pressure much of the scrimmage and chucked a couple of INTs – one a dumb throw into double coverage, another 10 yards past the nearest receiver and right to the deep safety, I think Dahl again. The TE cut off his route early on that second INT, though, and I'll bet he wasn't supposed to. At least in Boller's mind. I actually started worrying about Boller before the scrimmage started; I don't think he made a single good throw to the sideline in warmups. Brock Berlin lost the snap from center on his first play, really bad timing since the Rams were starting that drive at their goal line. Keith Null didn't show a lot of zing on his deep throws, and he badly missed on a timing route into the end zone during goal line drills, but he drilled a pass into the end zone the next play for a TD on what had to be his best throw of camp so far. Null also showed off a pretty nice play-fake. They're doing well enough by-and-large with the short passing game, but there were a lot of misses deep.

            * RB: Very limited action for Steven Jackson – 3-4 snaps – and Kenneth Darby, and on just about any sweep, the refs were blowing the whistle before the back could get out and turn the corner, making it hard again to figure how well many running plays actually would have fared. Samkon Gado started at fullback; I do not believe Mike Karney played. Gado's RB3 ahead of Antonio Pittman, but Pittman showed some of the nice footwork and elusiveness that makes him worth keeping around. Chris Ogbannaya and Null collided on one attempted handoff and had a lengthy discussion on the field over who was at fault....
            -08-08-2009, 12:07 AM
          • MFranke
            RamView, 8/26/2011: Rams 14, Chiefs 10 (Long)
            by MFranke
            RamView, August 26, 2011
            From The Couch
            (Report and opinions on the game.)
            Preseason Game #3: Rams 14, Chiefs 10

            Taking last week's shortcomings to heart, the Rams beat the Chiefs at their own game, controlling the line of scrimmage, pounding out a 2-TD lead and holding them with run defense, to re-claim the Governor's Cup. Good reversals of some bad trends should have them pointed in the right direction for the regular season.

            Position by position:
            * QB: Good night for Sam Bradford (9-16-95, 87.2 passer rating), who took advantage of the starting offense's running prowess for two touchdown passes. He kept the opening drive alive with a 3rd-and-19 pass to Brandon Gibson that gained 20, and later in the red zone, a 4-yarder to Danny Amendola that gained 4.0001. With Steven Jackson running amok the rest of the drive, Bradford could take advantage at the goal line with play-action that sprung Mike Sims-Walker wide open in the back of the end zone for a 6-yard TD. Getting the ball out quickly paid off for Bradford the next drive. Off a short drop, he hit Amendola on the sideline for 11 to get the drive moving. In the red zone, after having hit Lance Kendricks to convert a 3rd down, he spied the rookie TE single-covered by a linebacker and went right back to him, cashing in the mismatch with a perfect pass into the corner of the end zone for a 14-0 lead. Bradford's night flattened out from there. Near his own goal line in the 2nd, he threw an interception directly to Derrick Johnson. Greg Salas was open a few yards away. I can't say if Bradford missed Johnson rotating coverage, or saw him and threw a bad ball, or if Salas was supposed to shorten his route instead of continuing upfield. The Rams avoided disaster there, but now on the next drive, Bradford started taking some shots. Johnson hit him from behind to force an incompletion, and two plays later, yes, more Johnson again, sacking Bradford on a dog blitz. Bradford's 13-yard scramble got the Rams across midfield in the final 2:00 of the half, but they couldn't advance from there. Bradford threw well, and was as mobile in the pocket and aware of the pass rush as you like to see from him, with the exception of that Johnson sequence. One worry is that the Chief D was more vanilla than a Tea Party mixer on the drives the Rams scored, and the Rams didn't score once K.C. started coming after them with blitzes. A.J. Feeley (8-13-64, 41.8 PR) played almost the whole second half but spoiled an otherwise good outing with a bad-looking sideline INT with the Rams in scoring range. He did a nice job getting the ball out to beat the blitz but couldn't lead the second team to a score. Thaddeus Lewis (0-2) didn't get much opportunity to repeat last week's success and got hit on one of the two dropbacks he did get to take. Buoyed along by a strong running game and another dose of the Lance Kendricks Experience, the passing game regained its stride...
            -08-27-2011, 05:47 AM
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