Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Posted By Michael Tunison
"Could the impossible implosion happen again? Just last year the football world was transfixed by the historical ineptitude that permitted the Lions to finish an unprecedented 0-16. But the St. Louis Rams appear primed to match that disgraceful benchmark, and maybe even look worse doing so.
Granted, it's still early. And, frankly, going 0-16 is more remarkable than it sounds. All it takes to snap is catching a team in a flat performance or creating a few freak turnovers. But if anyone has the potential this year, without a doubt it's St. Louis. Through five games last year, that winless Lions team amassed a point differential of -83, though they came within two points (and some would say were hosed by questionable officiating) of stealing a win against the eventual division champion Minnesota Vikings. This year's Rams team, meanwhile, through five games has already been shutout twice and has a point differential of -112. Yes, they look worse than The Worst Team Ever.
Rams fans, if they can pretend they're not actually distressed about the Cardinals exit from the National League playoffs, would argue there are signs that their team easily has a victory in them. After all, the Rams outgained the Vikings this past Sunday (even if a lot of that was garbage time yardage), but were bedeviled by three red zone turnovers. Moreover, Kyle Boller will no longer be the starter, allowing Marc Bulger -- who, unlike Boller, has made displays of competency in his career -- to return under center, not that he's been particularly dazzling in the chances he's gotten this year anyway.
The thing is, looking at the Rams schedule, they may have already squandered one of their best opportunities at getting into the win column (much like the Lions did with the Vikings early last season), the Week 2 game in Washington, where the 'Skins gave them a chance at a game-winning drive. Six of the Rams' final 11 games are against teams currently .500 or better. Of the remaining five games, three of them are on the road. That leaves home games against division rival Seattle (which suffered a few setbacks that can be pinned on Matt Hasselbeck's injury) and an always potentially explosive Texans team.
In fact, the key to whether the Rams become the next 0-16 punchline could be a Nov. 1 matchup in Detroit. The Lions, having shown signs of life in recent weeks by beating the Redskins and hanging with the Vikings, Bears and Steelers, have an opportunity as a franchise to get past the opprobrious distinction of a winless season by passing that burden onto someone else. No doubt they'd be all too happy to share that misery."
To me it seems like this guy has watched about 3 min. of rams film this year and about 30min of stat sheets...
Posted By Michael Tunison
"Could the impossible implosion happen again? Just last year the football world was transfixed by the historical ineptitude that permitted the Lions to finish an unprecedented 0-16. But the St. Louis Rams appear primed to match that disgraceful benchmark, and maybe even look worse doing so.
Granted, it's still early. And, frankly, going 0-16 is more remarkable than it sounds. All it takes to snap is catching a team in a flat performance or creating a few freak turnovers. But if anyone has the potential this year, without a doubt it's St. Louis. Through five games last year, that winless Lions team amassed a point differential of -83, though they came within two points (and some would say were hosed by questionable officiating) of stealing a win against the eventual division champion Minnesota Vikings. This year's Rams team, meanwhile, through five games has already been shutout twice and has a point differential of -112. Yes, they look worse than The Worst Team Ever.
Rams fans, if they can pretend they're not actually distressed about the Cardinals exit from the National League playoffs, would argue there are signs that their team easily has a victory in them. After all, the Rams outgained the Vikings this past Sunday (even if a lot of that was garbage time yardage), but were bedeviled by three red zone turnovers. Moreover, Kyle Boller will no longer be the starter, allowing Marc Bulger -- who, unlike Boller, has made displays of competency in his career -- to return under center, not that he's been particularly dazzling in the chances he's gotten this year anyway.
The thing is, looking at the Rams schedule, they may have already squandered one of their best opportunities at getting into the win column (much like the Lions did with the Vikings early last season), the Week 2 game in Washington, where the 'Skins gave them a chance at a game-winning drive. Six of the Rams' final 11 games are against teams currently .500 or better. Of the remaining five games, three of them are on the road. That leaves home games against division rival Seattle (which suffered a few setbacks that can be pinned on Matt Hasselbeck's injury) and an always potentially explosive Texans team.
In fact, the key to whether the Rams become the next 0-16 punchline could be a Nov. 1 matchup in Detroit. The Lions, having shown signs of life in recent weeks by beating the Redskins and hanging with the Vikings, Bears and Steelers, have an opportunity as a franchise to get past the opprobrious distinction of a winless season by passing that burden onto someone else. No doubt they'd be all too happy to share that misery."
To me it seems like this guy has watched about 3 min. of rams film this year and about 30min of stat sheets...
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