Friday, November 27, 2015

Dome Operator says Rams must play in St.Louis, not in London.

Dome operator says Rams must play in St. Louis, not London

The Rams' lease agreement prohibits playing home games in London.
Jeff Curry / USA TODAY Sports
ST. LOUIS -- The NFL announced Wednesday that the Rams will play a home game in London next season and the operator of the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis responded almost immediately by saying the team's lease agreement prohibits it.

The Rams would play a not-yet-decided NFC East team Oct. 23 at Twickenham Stadium as part of three games in London detailed by the NFL.

In a statement, the St. Louis Convention and Visitors Commission said it has had no formal discussions with the team about their 2016 plans. The Rams have until Jan. 28 to inform the CVC if they intend to play the 2016 season at the dome, but if they do "the terms of the lease remain in effect and provides that all Rams NFL home games (other than preseason) will be played at the facilities."

A CVC spokesman declined to speculate about what steps the organization might take to keep the team from playing in London. A message seeking comment from the Rams wasn't immediately returned.

There is uncertainty whether the Rams will even belong to St. Louis by then. Owners of the Rams, San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders are all exploring moves to Los Angeles, perhaps as early as next season. Rams owner Stan Kroenke is part of a group planning a new stadium in suburban Los Angeles.

A governor-appointed stadium task force is developing plans for a $1 billion stadium along the Mississippi River as part of the effort to either keep the Rams or lure another team. The task force said in a statement that if the Rams get on board with the project, "we're certain accommodations can be made for the Rams to play one game in London next season."

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Rams set to play a home game in London next season.

Rams set to play a home game in London next season. Week 7 on Sunday, October 23, in the first-ever NFL game at Twickenham Stadium, the St. Louis Rams will host the NFC East team that finishes in the same spot in the standings as the Rams do in the NFC West based on the NFL's scheduling formula.
    If the NFL wants to be in in Los Angeles, why is it playing game in London? Los Angles is and will continue to be a negotion tool for owners to get staduims built in their current cities. I almost feel bad for Los Angeles;because, the NFL continues to tease the city of Los Angeles with an NFL team.

Trace Rams’ Offensive Struggles to Failures in the Draft

Trace Rams’ Offensive Struggles to Failures in the Draft
When the Rams travel to Cincinnati on Sunday, they’ll unpack an offense that ranks 31st in the NFL in total yards per game, 32nd in the league in passing yards per contest, and 31st in points per game.
greg robinson
Rams tackle Greg Robinson, the second overall selection in the 2014 Draft, has been largely ineffective so far for St. Louis.
This level of inefficiency doesn’t happen overnight.
Jeff Fisher and Les Snead deserve credit for restocking a roster that was significantly devoid of talent when they arrived in 2012.
They also deserve blame for how woeful the current product is on offense.
The Rams’ offensive struggles can be traced back to recent drafts. For every Aaron Donald, Michael Brockers and Janoris Jenkins selected on defense, there’s been an Isaiah Pead, Brian Quick and Greg Robinson on offense. This regime has done a great job finding mid and late-round defensive gems like Trumaine Johnson and E.J. Gaines, but there have been misses on Garrett Gilbert, Chris Givens and Barrett Jones to accompany those hits.
Some fans believe teams should hit on all of their draft picks. That’s insane.
Bill Walsh often noted that if a drafted player contributes to the team in a measurable way for at least two years, he should be considered a “good” draft choice.
Not every first-rounder is going to be a Hall of Famer and not every seventh-rounder is going to make the team. All franchises, not just the Rams, have plenty of draft misses.
That said, there’s a clear difference between the current regime’s ability to scout, draft, and develop defenders, and its ability to scout, draft, and develop players on offense.
And therein lies the current problem.
This Rams offense isn’t improving, and despite claims that Fisher’s brand of football is outdated, the bigger problem is talent.
There’s nothing wrong with having a team whose identity is to win games on the strength of its defense and running game. The Seahawks went to back-to-back Super Bowls with that general philosophy and the 2015 Panthers are unbeaten despite the fact that they’re averaging just 40.4 more passing yards per game than the Rams.
Yes, the Seahawks and Panthers have quarterbacks, but don’t stop there. It isn’t just the quarterback position that’s held the Rams back. They haven’t been able to develop a legitimate weapon in the passing game and the offensive line is a mess because of injuries and inexperience.
What’s frustrating is that the Rams clearly have the right approach on defense.
They’ve invested draft picks in the first three rounds on legitimate talent like Donald, Brockers, Jenkins, Johnson, Alec Ogletree, and T.J. McDonald. They also didn’t stop adding quality depth via the trade market (Mark Barron), or free agency (William Hayes and Nick Fairley), just because they were set at a certain position. The Rams knew the importance of having quality depth for when injuries inevitably struck.
But on offense? Snead and Fisher avoided adding a lineman outside of Garrett Reynolds this offseason and instead threw all of their eggs into the 2015 draft basket. They did invest four picks on the offensive line this past April, but what if 2015 turns out to be a down year for offensive linemen? Then the Rams just scarified quality for quantity, and their offensive line is littered with inexperience because of it.
Here’s another reality: The Rams don’t have the personnel to match their current identity on offense.
The plan three years ago was for Sam Bradford to run an offense similar to the system he ran at Oklahoma (i.e. spread the ball out and attack teams with quick, accurate passes that allow receivers to generate yards after contact). But four games into the 2013 season, the Rams scratched that idea, Bradford got hurt, and the rest is history. That’s how you get a Jared Cook and a Tavon Austin (as good as he’s been this season) shoehorned into your current run-first offense.
What’s the solution? The Rams need to take the same relentless approach they’ve used to build a formidable defense and apply it to the other side of the ball. But that’s easier said then done.
Quarterbacks don’t grow on trees, the return on investment in the free agent market is usually poor (as this team knows all too well), and the draft offers just as much risk as hope.
Thankfully, the Rams do have one foundation piece on offense in Todd Gurley. But unless they find a franchise quarterback, a reliable weapon outside of Austin in the passing game, and the young offensive line grows up in a hurry, the frustrations fans currently feel about the offense aren’t going away.

Congratulations to our 2016 Pro Football Hall of Fame Semifinalists!


Tuesday, November 17, 2015

NFL sees record number of long TDs: good offense or terrible defense?

NFL sees record number of long TDs: good offense or terrible defense?.
Jay Busbee at Shutdown Corner

You probably already know this if you've checked your fantasy scores, but the NFL recorded a record number of 75-plus-yard touchdowns on Sunday—six, to be exact. (Hopefully some were for your team and none for your opponent's.) Big plays are dramatic, big plays ignite or deflate the crowd, big plays get the highlight commentators whooping ... but why did we see so many all at once?
The New York Times ran down the list of big plays:

• An 85-yarder by Chicago's Zach Miller against St. Louis;
• An 88-yarder by fellow Bear Jeremy Langford;
• A 78-yarder by Washington's Matt Jones;
• An 80-yarder by Kansas City's Charcandrick West against Denver;
• An 87-yarder by New York's Odell Beckham Jr. against New England; and
• A 76-yarder by the Patriots' Rob Gronkowski against the Giants.

So what can we glean from all this? Is the NFL at last shaking off its no-fun reputation and opening up the game? Are we headed to a spread-offense, send-everybody-deep era of glorious aerial gameplay? Of course not. Most of these plays were the result of defensive miscues and mistakes, bad angles, missed tackles, misread coverages, and much more. Several of the players making big plays were backups at the start of the season, but injuries have, as usual, decimated teams and left them scrambling to patch holes with often-overmatched backups.
  This is a confluence of forces. It's clear that the NFL is in an era of unprecedented offensive bias. Quarterbacks have more room to move, receivers have more latitude in going for the catch, and any time a defender wanders into the same area code, the receiver will make that throw-the-flag gesture. What that's meant is that defenses have to be more conservative, but in surrendering the short-yardage play there's always the possibility of a breakout play.
  The good news? The later we get into the season, the more likely you are to see some of these short-yardage plays go very, very long. The bad news? That increases the odds one will break against you.

Monday, November 16, 2015

Ten Takeaways from the Rams' 37-13 Loss to the Bears

Ten Takeaways from the Rams’ 37-13 Loss to the Bears

When a first year coach of a team that was 5-11 last year takes his team on the road to face a fourth year coach of a team that’s supposed to be ascending, and his team drills the opponent…that should be bad news for the fourth year coach.
jeff fisher-10
Rams coach Jeff Fisher steps onto the field just prior to Sunday’s Rams loss.
The last NFL coach to make it to a fifth season without making the playoffs was Gary Kubiak of the Texans, who started in 2006 and didn’t make the playoffs until 2011.
It looks like Jeff Fisher is on a similar path.
The lack of consistency on the part of the Rams is troubling, and the fact that they are two games behind the last wild card team in the conference pretty much eliminates them from the playoffs.  The last two games were not only winnable for the Rams, but the home game against Chicago was a must win, and they got hammered 37-13.
And with that, ten takeaways…
1) The Rams got off to a terrific start on offense, driving eighty yards in seven plays (11.4 per play) to a touchdown that put them ahead 7-0.  After that opening drive, the Rams ran 25 plays the remainder of the first half, and picked up 66 yards.  In the second half, they gained 139 yards on 29 plays.  Breaking it down, the Rams amassed just 205 yards after their opening drive, averaging 3.8 yards per play.
2) The Rams defense was killed by big plays, which is awfully unusual for them.  Before Sunday, the only play over fifty yards the Rams had allowed was a 65 yard pass from Aaron Rodgers to James Jones.  The second biggest play was a 39 yard run by Matt Jones of Washington.  The 87 and 83 yard touchdown passes by Jay Cutler to Zach Miller and Jeremy Langford, respectively, were more than enough to get the defense on its heels, and it never recovered.
3) We wondered during the pregame show if the absence of Matt Forte might cause the Rams to concentrate too much on Alshon Jeffery and Martellus Bennett, the two biggest remaining playmakers for Chicago.  Sure enough, Jeffery was held to 23 yards on three catches, and Bennett had three grabs for eighteen yards.  The Rams covered those guys, but saw their stout run defense disintegrate, allowing 153 yards on 37 carries.  In week nine of year four, more is expected of a defense working against Jeremy Langford and Kadeem Carey.
4) Meanwhile, the Rams running game has fallen back to its old ways.  Running backs had eighteen carries for 76 yards, but before a garbage time drive that featured Trey Mason, they had thirteen carries for 48 yards.  The running game certainly wasn’t up to winning NFL standards.  Teams are stacking the box against Todd Gurley and daring the Rams to throw, and the Rams simply aren’t efficient enough in the passing game to make them pay.
nick foles-8
Foles was 17 of 36 for 200 yards with a QB rating of 53.0 in Sunday’s Rams loss.
5) The Rams coaching staff hasn’t adapted to Nick Foles’ limitations. Of course, one of those limitations is the talent level of his recievers, and there’s nothing anyone can do about that.
But Foles also has real trouble throwing effectively outside the numbers, and the Rams continue to try plays on the perimeter.
They MUST work inside the numbers if they’re going to have success, because he simply can’t make the intermediate-to-long throw on the sideline.
6) At this stage of the game, it’s more than fair to question whether or not Fisher is up to the job of winning a championship, which should be the ultimate goal of any franchise.  His Rams record now is 24-32-1.  He has his coaching staff and his players.  Any suggestion of injuries being an excuse are diminished by the fact that he’s has four years to build the roster and the depth is his.
On Sunday, Fisher had his hand-picked quarterback, running back, receivers, tight ends, tackles, center, one guard, defensive tackles, one end, two linebackers and secondary.  No excuses.  In game nine of year four, there is no excuse to lose this game.  Try to think of a circumstance under which Fisher would lead the Rams to a championship.  I can’t.
7) Left tackle Greg Robinson is playing far from the quality of a 2nd pick in the draft.  After committing three holding penalties, Robinson leads all NFL offensive players in penalties with nine, an average of one per game, and is tied with Jason Kelce of Philadelphia with eight offensive holding penalties.  He had two more holding penalties against Cleveland that were declined.
On Sunday, one of his holds nullified a Tavon Austin touchdown that would have made the score 14-7 Rams, but instead they kicked a field goal.  That was a devastating penalty. Another third quarter hold nullified an Austin catch that would have provided a first down at the Bears’ 40. The second tackle taken in the 2014 draft, Jake Matthews of Atlanta, has committed three penalties, two of which were holding, and has been a much more effective pass blocker than Robinson.  Robinson is still very young, but the lack of progress is alarming.
8) On the bright side for Stan Kroenke, with dynamic pricing for the Bears game, the Rams distributed more than 60,000 tickets and collected more revenue for a home game than they ever have.  The Rams were able to get more people into the building than for any game this season, and collect the biggest gate ever.  And almost half the crowd went home happy.
9) Down 27-13 early in the fourth quarter, the Rams tried a fake punt deep in their own territory, and Johnny Hekker’s pass fell incomplete.  While Jeff Fisher was asked about it after the game, it was a non-factor.  The Bears kicked a field goal after the failed attempt, and the Rams offense wasn’t going to produce two touchdowns anyway.  The failed fake was a non-factor in the defeat.  By that time, the game had been decided.
10) Foles is 28th in passer rating and 28th in yards in the NFL.  His play simply isn’t up to a level that’s going to help a team win, let alone make a team win.  His 186.4 yards per game are 34th in the league, and as Kevin Wheeler mentioned in the postgame show on 101 ESPN, three of the seven touchdown passes he’s thrown in nine games came in one game, at Arizona.  He needs to have more good games if the Rams are to have ANY chance to win.
Next week the Rams are at Baltimore.  Since they’ve lost two in a row and aren’t in a position to put anything positive together, they have a shot against the Ravens.  But in terms of having a playoff shot in 2015, that likely went by the boards with the blowout loss to the Bears on Sunday.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Welker contributes with three catches in season debut with Rams

Welker hauls in three receptions in 'OK' season debut with Rams

Nov 15, 2015; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Rams wide receiver Wes Welker (19) catches a pass for a first down as Chicago Bears outside linebacker Jonathan Anderson (58) closes in for the tackle during the second half at the Edward Jones Dome. The Bears won the game 37-13. Mandatory Credit: Billy Hurst-USA TODAY Sports
Nov 15, 2015; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Rams wide receiver Wes Welker (19) catches a pass for a first down as Chicago Bears outside linebacker Jonathan Anderson (58) closes in for the tackle during the second half at the Edward Jones Dome. The Bears won the game 37-13. Mandatory Credit: Billy Hurst-USA TODAY Sports

Wes Welker had three catches for 32 yards in his debut with the Rams. Billy Hurst USA TODAY Sports
Wes Welker was among the few positives in another listless offensive performance by the St. Louis Rams in their 37-13 home loss to the Chicago Bears on Sunday.
Making his season debut six days after signing with the Rams, Welker hauled in three receptions - the most among St. Louis wideouts - for 32 yards while playing primarily in third-down situations.
  I'd say it was OK," assessed Welker, who was critical of himself for not being beyond the third-down marker on his first catch of the game. "It's a tough situation but at the same time you've still got to make those plays for the team."
The 34-year-old Welker was brought in by the Rams on Monday after wideout Stedman Bailey was suspended four games by the NFL for violating the league's policy on substance abuse. He said the quick turnaround to playing with a new team was not that difficult.
"Not really," Welker said. "I think when you've been doing it this long and understand everything, nothing's changed. It's still football."
Welker showed the great hands that have been a trademark of his career, extending himself to snag a six-yard toss from quarterback Nick Foles with a fingertip catch. He added third-quarter receptions of 12 and 14 yards, but St. Louis managed only two field goals after scoring on its opening possession.
"I think it was a lot of mental mistakes on our part. The penalties really hurt us," Welker said. "We'd have positive plays and then have a penalty bring it back and so we have to clean all that stuff up."


                                                                 

Friday, November 13, 2015

Calvin Johnson to St Louis?

Calvin Johnson Landing Spots If Detroit Lions Trade Him


by  

t. Louis Rams

Defense and running the ball are two things the St. Louis Rams now know they can do as well as any team in the country.  However, even with an upgrade at quarterback in Nick Foles they continue to struggle in the passing game.  That could mean a general lack of quality receivers.  St. Louis will have over $38 million in cap space next year, so if they wanted to think aggressively they could make a deal for Megatron work.

Panthers owner Jerry Richardson throws support behind Carson project

Jerry Richardson throws support behind Carson project

Jerry RichardsonAP
It’s been believed for months that, in the race to Los Angeles, influential Panthers owner Jerry Richardson (a leader on the league’s L.A. committee) supports the Chargers over the Rams.
On Wednesday, Richardson made that crystal clear.
I support the Carson project,” Richardson told reporters on Wednesday outside the NFL’s headquarters in Manhattan, where some owners had gathered to hear presentations from the three cities that hope to keep the teams that hope to move to L.A., via David Hunn of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Asked whether he supports the Carson project more than the Inglewood project, Richardson was blunt: “You can’t support both.”
Richardson’s comments lend credence to the PFT report from late September regarding the opposition of Richardson to a relocation of the Rams: “Richardson and other owners view the Chargers and Raiders as more eligible to move under the league’s relocation policy, especially since it appears that St. Louis has cobbled together a viable plan for building a new stadium and keeping the Rams in the place they’ve been for the last 20 years.”
The real question is whether only the Chargers or both the Chargers and Raiders would make the move. Previously, it was believed that the owners didn’t want to put two teams in L.A. absent a high level of confidence that both would be successful financially. The promised involvement of Disney CEO Robert Iger in the project helps tremendously, especially if Iger eventually parlays his role into a minority stake in the Raiders, giving owner Mark Davis the partner he needs to secure the faith of his peers.

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Notoriously fickle L.A Market

Both the Rams and Raiders previously struggled to draw crowds in the notoriously fickle L.A. market.  During their final season in L.A. in 1994, the Raiders and Rams ranked 24th and 28th out of 28 NFL teams in home attendance with 42,000 and 51,000 per game, according to STATS, LLC. The season before, the Raiders drew even fewer fans at home in the regular season despite fielding a playoff team with a 10-6 record and two future Hall of Famers.

Disney wants even more of that sweet, sweet NFL action

By   on Nov 11, 2015, 9:39a

CARSON GETS A BOOST: The joint Los Angeles stadium project between the Chargers and Raiders brought in a big gun this week. CBS Sports' Jason La Canfora reported Wednesday morning that Bob Iger, the CEO of Disney, has signed on as president of the Carson project. He also will have the option to buy an ownership share of either team. Perhaps most interesting about this news is that the Inglewood stadium project was praised for being an "entertainment complex" that was capable of housing other Hollywood events and attractions. With Disney in the mix, it looks like Carson has an answer to that advantage.

INGLEWOOD TROUBLES: Meanwhile, the other NFL stadium project in Los Angeles, Stan Kroenke's gilded palace of entertainment in Inglewood, has caught the eye of the Federal Aviation Administration for potential interference with planes coming and going at LAX.
 
OWNERS MEETING: Competing news from both L.A. stadium projects comes just as the Los Angeles committee of owners is set to meet Wednesday in New York, to get updates on the stadium proposals for both L.A. projects and the three home markets. The NFL is expected to make a decision about which team(s) will be approved to relocate to L.A. in January.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Why Los Ageles is wrong for the NFL

 I was born and raised in Los Angles, California. I am a St. Louis Rams fan and a Los Angels Dodgers fan. Today, I reside in St. Peters, Missouri. St. Louis has been my home now for the past 30 years. I enjoy St. Louis and the people. I do miss the beaches of Sothern California and that is about it. I grew up a Rams fan,  still a Rams fan and will forever be a Rams fan.
    I spent my youth watching the Rams and Raiders play in the Colosseum. My boyhood heroes were Jack Yougblood, Jack Snow,  Marcus Allen and Dave Casper. The teams received solid support when they were in the playoffs. The teams received little support when they stopped winning. One thing I can remember well, is seeing the Colosseum and Anaheim Stadium occupied with fans from other cities. California is packed with people from other parts of the country. I would see Cowboy, Redskin, Bear, Packer, Chief, Steeler and Jets fans well represented at games in Los Angeles and Anaheim.
   While serving in the Marine Corps, I was stationed at Camp Pendelton in Oceanside, Ca. The Rams and Chargers would provide free tickets to the Marines on the base. When the Rams would give away tickets, it was hard to find people to go with me. At the time, the Rams were not doing very well. I can remember the stadium not being very full. People in the Los Angeles and Orange county areas would just rather spend the day at the beach or take advantage of one of the other many options in the area.
   Most people in Los Angeles are just more passionate about other things. Don't get me wrong, there are people in Los Angeles that are very die hard fans. When it comes to the Trojan football, UCLA basketball and Dodger baseball you will find passion. The passion for USC and UCLA comes from the Alumni and students for the most part. Baseball and Softball can be played year round in southern California; therefore you have a bigger interest in Dodgers baseball than any other sport. When it comes down to it, people in Southern California would rather play sports than watch sports.
  Right now the Lakers are not doing so well and they are not drawing very big crowds.  Sports fans in the Los Angeles are fair weathered fans. The only exception is the Dodgers. Good or bad the Dodgers always draw large crowds. I believe this is due to the large Hispanic and Asian populations in Southern California, Hispanics and Asians play baseball more than any other sport. Baseball is and will always be the most popular sport in Southern California because of this.
   In St. Louis, we do not have as many options when it coms to our choices on how we spend our free time. We have great museums, hunting, fishing and one of the best Zoo's in the world. Because of the limited entertainment options in our region,  people all across the state of Missouri will and always have supported major college and professional sports. This creates an natural interest in sports.
   The Rams, Chiefs, Cardinals, Royals and Blues always draw crowds no matter what. I have seen loosing and wining football here in St. Louis. Playoff and regular season football have always been more exciting to attend here in St. Louis than they ever were in Los Angeles or Anaheim. There is a real bond and attachment to the St. Louis Rams. There was never this win or loose devotion in Los Angeles. Because of this, it does not make any sense to me why an NFL team owner or the NFL would want to move any team to the Los Angeles area. Los Angeles may be the second largest market; however, what exactly does that market consist of? What is the Los Angeles market really watching?
 In is my belief that Los Angeles area may embrace a new marriage to NFL with a shinny new stadium and great attendance; however, after the honey moon is over the crowds will dwindle as they always have in Los Angeles. The NFL will be back in the same situation it was in when the Rams and Raiders left once again.

A Pair of GOP Stalwarts Stand Up For Proposed NFL Stadium Project in St. Louis - St. Louis Magazine

A Pair of GOP Stalwarts Stand Up For Proposed NFL Stadium Project in St. Louis - St. Louis Magazine
Stan & the NFL are making money here in St. Louis

Complicated and expensive: What recent NFL stadium deals can teach St. Louis : News

Complicated and expensive: What recent NFL stadium deals can teach St. Louis : News

Saturday, November 7, 2015

About 1,500 people attend NFL hearing to lobby for local stadium10/28/2015 - NFL St. Louis Rams

Goodell on NFL team in LA: 'It's a process'NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell talks about the possibility of having an NFL team in Los Angeles next season.
ST. LOUIS -- With the future of their favorite football team hanging over their heads, about 1,500 St. Louis Rams fans turned up at the NFL's first town hall hearing Tuesday to offer their pleas to keep the team from relocating to Los Angeles.
The hearing offered fans a chance to speak directly to executive vice president Eric Grubman, vice president of corporate development Chris Hardart, senior vice president of public policy Cynthia Hogan and league attorney Jay Bauman.
The result was a meeting in which fans talked in three-minute bursts (occasionally going over) for three hours, with passionate questions and comments about how much the team means to the community.
"I think it's a very emotional night," Grubman said. "I think for them it's clearly the time to express their point of view and their passion, and, frankly, I think for the NFL employees, it's hard. It's hard to hear that kind of passion come through and not have answers that make people happy."
The meeting started with Hogan introducing St. Louis stadium task force leaders Dave Peacock and Bob Blitz, who walked on stage to a loud standing ovation. Peacock encouraged those in the crowd to express their feelings but do it respectfully.
Peacock, Blitz and the St. Louis stadium task force were not available to media but issued a statement after the hearing.
"We thank the sports fans of St. Louis for their passion, support, eloquence and class at tonight's NFL hearing," the statement read. "The fans who spoke this evening represented the St. Louis community and expressed our love for the Rams in an incredibly powerful and convincing manner. We thank the NFL for the opportunity to be heard, and we are extremely humbled and proud to represent St. Louis in this effort."
Rams chief operating officer Kevin Demoff was then introduced and walked on the stage to lighter applause with a few boos mixed in. Demoff told the crowd he looked forward to hearing what fans had to say.
From there, the fans took over, with podiums set up on either side of the theater. Fans of all ages and backgrounds took their turns at the podium, with many of the comments focused on whether the Rams meet the NFL's relocation guidelines and some harsh words directed at owner Stan Kroenke.
Early in the proceedings, 81-year old fan David Collins, who has "World's Oldest Rams Fan 1946" stitched on the back of his wheelchair, tried to speak, but his emotions got the better of him, and his wife Mary took over. She told the story of the couple moving closer to St. Louis for her to take a job and gaining her husband's approval because it was closer to his favorite team.
"We cannot move back to Los Angeles because prices have gone sky-high," Mary Collins said. "Please do not take my Rams away from me again. They belong to the fans like me. The owners are just the caretakers."
Despite plenty of negativity toward Kroenke, a few fans made it a point to say a relationship between the owner and the city could be salvaged if Kroenke would agree to invest in the St. Louis stadium proposal.
"If Mr. Kroenke inks a 30-year lease, I guarantee you, all of this will be forgotten," one fan said. "We want him to be successful here."
Hashim Raza, a local doctor, recounted the story of his family moving to the United States and the Rams helping him and his family feel like part of a community.
"I don't know 95 percent of the people in this room, but they're all my brothers and sisters," Raza said. "They all love the Rams."
Another fan read an impassioned plea in the form of a poem and made it a point to hammer home the team's involvement in community initiatives, which drew praise from Grubman.
"[I've] watched a lot of people try to describe how team gets woven in a community," Grubman said. "I have never heard anybody describe it like that."
Tensions were mostly held in check for the duration of the meeting, though at one point a speaker questioned what the NFL was going to do to help with racial inequality in St. Louis. As she spoke, a group of people unfurled a banner reading "Fund Schools, Not Football" while chanting.
The fans in attendance responded by yelling "Let's go Rams" repeatedly as the group of protesters was escorted from the building.
Whether the night's event or similar hearings taking place in San Diego and Oakland, California, this week ultimately mean much in the final equation is up for debate, but Hogan offered some words of encouragement to the fans in attendance.
"It's hard for me to imagine there's a city in the United States that has a better fan base," Hogan said.
The league executives will head to San Diego and Oakland for meetings Wednesday and Thursday, respectively. When the town hall hearings in all three markets are complete, executives will compile the questions they received, identify common themes in the comments made in person as well as submitted online and attempt to gain a glimpse of how things are in each city.
"Best we can, we'll try to represent for the owners what it is like in those markets and how strong the passion is," Grubman said.
In that regard, how did St. Louis fare?
"I come away impressed with the passion," Grubman said. "How could you not?"

NFL Los Angeles Team In 2015? Stadium Deal, Team Owners Are Relocation Hurdles

By @TBarrabi t.barrabi@ibtimes.com on  

NFL's Return To Los Angeles
The Oakland Raiders and the San Diego Chargers are considered two of the top three contenders among NFL franchises that could relocate to Los Angeles. Reuters/Jake Roth-USA TODAY Sports
Los Angeles is eager to roll out the red carpet for the return of an NFL franchise in 2015. For both pro athletes and top executives, there isn't a more attractive locale. The City of Angels offers year-round breezy skies, the promise of high-end corporate sponsorships, celebrity endorsements and ravenous fans who've been drooling for a professional football team ever since the Oakland Raiders and the St. Louis Rams each skipped town ahead of the 1995 season.
Both the MLB and the NBA have two different franchises playing in the same city. The NFL also recognizes the opportunity – Commissioner Roger Goodell has publicly supported the league’s arrival by as soon as 2015. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who previously said he would not approve public funding for a new stadium, told a local radio station in October that it was “highly likely” that the city would have its own team within the next year.

But in the nearly two decades since the United States’ most profitable professional sports league had a franchise in the nation’s second-largest media market, public enthusiasm for the NFL’s return to Los Angeles has yet to mesh with the economic and political realities of the situation, experts said. The most obvious obstacle is the lack of a suitable stadium in downtown Los Angeles or any solidified plan to build one.
“Without a clear path to a new stadium, Los Angeles is no better market [for any NFL team] than [the one] they’re already in,” said Victor Matheson, a professor of economics and accounting at the College of Holy Cross. In other words, there likely won’t be an NFL team in Los Angeles in time for next season.
A lack of public funding and an unwillingness to privately finance the construction of a stadium without a firm commitment from a willing team, such as the Rams, the Raiders or the Chargers, have helped keep Los Angeles from realizing its NFL dreams. And Goodell’s comments earlier this month after the NFL’s annual owners’ meetings made it clear that no such commitment was on track for 2015. “I’m not at the point where I would tell you that anything is imminent or that we have a solution identified at this point in time. There is progress, but we’ve all heard that before,” he said.
In theory, 2015 should be the perfect year for the Rams, the Raiders or the Chargers to make a move to Los Angeles. All three teams are tired of playing in their aging stadiums. All three have significant ties to Los Angeles – the Rams and the Raiders each used to play there, and the Chargers draw about 30 percent of their revenue from the L.A. market, according to ESPN.
More importantly, all three franchises have expiring stadium leases. The Chargers could have opted out for a mere $17.6 million. The Rams have a strange provision in their current lease that allows them to opt out of their deal if the city of St. Louis does not pay to keep the Edward Jones Dome at the top of the NFL in terms of amenities, and city officials declined a $700 million proposal in February that would have used taxpayer money to upgrade the stadium.
Moreover, Rams owner Stan Kroenke bought 60 acres of land near the legendary L.A. Forum in Inglewood, California, last December. Its mere existence suggests the Rams are, at the very least, exploring the possibility of a move to California.
But the NFL’s momentum toward Los Angeles came to a screeching halt Tuesday, when Chargers officials announced they would not opt out of their annual lease. Consensus opinion holds that the Chargers would not so brazenly write off a move to Los Angeles in 2015 without some sort of internal assurance that another team wasn't planning to land withint striking distance of San Diego, potentially eating into their profits.
There are indications that the Rams are backing off too. The Rams are already offering 2015 season tickets to their fans in St. Louis. And there are doubts that Raiders owner Mark Davis has the support within the league or the deep pockets necessary to fund a move, which would undoubtedly mean paying a relocation fee to other owners of as much as $250 million, according to the Orange County Register.
There are also problems with each of the two major proposed locations in the Los Angeles area. The NFL favors a proposal by the Anschutz Entertainment Group, which was recently granted a six-month extension by city officials to find an NFL team willing to play in a downtown stadium. But a stadium built by AEG would likely be owned by AEG and rented out to an NFL team, a situation that does not exist anywhere else in the league, said Andrew Zimbalist, a professor of economics at Smith College.
“[AEG owner Philip Anschutz] was going to own the stadium and he was not going to be the majority owner of the team. That doesn’t give the team owner enough control over the situation. The NFL doesn’t like that situation,” he said.
What about a stadium on Kroenke’s newly purchased land? It would meet the criteria of being owned and operated by an NFL team owner. But the 60-acre space lacks sufficient room for parking or tailgaiting, and Kroenke would be years behind AEG in terms of sidestepping the political and logistical challenges posed by building a stadium there.
And not everyone is convinced that Kroenke’s motives are pure. Some have suggested that the Rams owner bought land on the West Coast just so he could threaten the city of St. Louis into footing the bill for a brand-new local stadium. In fact, multiple experts said that NFL team owners may be reluctant to place a team in Los Angeles because it would mean the loss of the city as a bargaining chip in their own future stadium negotiations.
“The league really isn’t chomping at the bit too much to get a team in L.A. because it’s been a hugely profitable market for them in terms of a blackmail tool for the rest of the league,” said Matheson. “The lack of a team in L.A. has probably gotten five or six stadiums built around the rest of the league.”
Similar hurdles tripped up Los Angeles-based investors who tried to bring an expansion franchise to the city in the late 1990s, when the NFL opted to instead award an expansion team to Houston billionaire Bob McNair and his privately financed initiative.
If a plan for a Los Angeles stadium was approved and construction started tomorrow, it would still be years before the facility was ready to be used. Some have posed the possibility that the prospective franchise could temporarily play in the ancient Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum or the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, but it’s unlikely that any NFL franchise would agree to that solution, especially if it was moving specifically to escape the unfriendly confines of its own crumbling facilities. Waiting out construction for a year or two in their current market would pose problems, too.
“You would announce now that you were going to move your franchise to Los Angeles. You would say, ‘We will start play when the new stadium is finished in 2016.’ So you’d have a lame duck year in our home market, but everyone would hate you and you wouldn’t make as much money,” said Rick Burton, a professor of sports management at Syracuse University and former commissioner of Australia’s National Basketball League.
The NFL’s unique revenue-sharing arrangement also complicates matters. The league derives the majority of its revenue from its lucrative television deals, profits from which are split evenly among the league’s 32 teams. The majority of stadium ticket sales are also funneled back to the league. Without the right stadium in place – complete with ample luxury boxes and ripe for local sponsorship opportunities — the difference in revenue in a small market like Green Bay vs. a large market like Los Angeles is negligible.
Still, experts agree that a move to the city is inevitable. Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer’s purchase of the NBA’s Los Angeles Clippers for more than $2 billion earlier this year showed NFL owners how valuable a Los Angeles-based franchise has become in the modern market, if there was any doubt to begin with. And the payday promised by that relocation fee is alluring in its own right.
At least 75 percent of the 32 NFL owners have to sign off on a proposed relocation and a two-thirds vote is required to approve a new stadium. Ultimately, the NFL’s re-entry into the Los Angeles market will depend entirely on the whims of these 32 owners. Some, such as Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, have already expressed support for the move. But convincing a workable majority that the move is in their best interests will be a challenge.
“You’re dealing with a private cartel of owners. You’ve got 32 owners and they get to make the rules for how their league is going to be run. So they have to like the guy who’s going to possibly go to L.A. and they’re also going to want to know much money [they] can make,” Burton said.


Sources: Rams want area where Bush, McCown were injured fixed before next home game

Despite fact club may be headed to Los Angeles, team working with St. Louis officials to address area which has led to injuries in consecutive weekends

In the wake of injuries suffered by Cleveland Browns quarterback Josh McCown and San Francisco 49ers running back Reggie Bush, the Rams have informed the NFL and the city of St. Louis they want changes made to the concrete area behind the benches before their next home game, sources tell FOX Sports.
Rams coach Jeff Fisher told reporters on Monday the team would discuss the situation with the NFL. Privately, the Rams have made it clear they're intent on either adding turf or another surface that provides better footing before the team's Nov. 15 game against the Chicago Bears at the Edward Jones Dome.
The surface near the stands is the same as it's been since the team began playing in the dome in 1995, though it's come under scrutiny after McCown and Bush slipped in consecutive weeks.

McCown hurt his shoulder last week when he collided with the wall underneath the elevated seats behind the visiting bench. On Sunday, Bush suffered a much more severe knee injury that is expected to end his season when his feet gave out from under him as he tried to slow his momentum.


 

The concrete surface is exposed because the turf that covers the field does not extend all the way to the wall where the lower bowl of seats begins.

It's unclear at this point what the exact solution to the problem will be, as multiple options are being discussed. The city of St. Louis owns the dome, so the Rams have to work in concert with local officials to make any changes.

The Rams have four more home games this season. It's possible they have only four more home games in St. Louis, period, as they're one of the teams in the running to move to Los Angeles. A vote on the move isn't expected until January at the earliest.

In the meantime, the Rams are making the necessary change to their home stadium to ensure safety for all players as they enter the bench area.
A source said the NFL is also taking a look at other stadiums that have hard surfaces like the concrete in St. Louis to see if any other changes need to be made. The NFL Players Association is also monitoring the situation.


 
 

Some owners actively opposing L.A. move by Rams

Business Leaders Converge In Sun Valley, Idaho For Allen And Company Annual MeetingGetty ImagesAs the game of musical chairs winds closer to the point at which the music stops, some owners will be trying to guide certain teams toward, or away from, the available seats.
Per multiple sources, a group of influential owners strongly opposes the relocation of the Rams to Los Angeles. That group includes Panthers owner Jerry Richardson, who is emerging as a leader of the NFL’s L.A. committee.
As one source put it, Richardson and other owners view the Chargers and Raiders as more eligible to move under the league’s relocation policy, especially since it appears that St. Louis has cobbled together a viable plan for building a new stadium and keeping the Rams in the place they’ve been for the last 20 years.
Also, a move by the Chargers, who have tried for more than a decade to build a new stadium in San Diego, is viewed as the least disruptive to existing fan bases.
In response to a request for comment from PFT, Richardson said only that “we have every reason to believe that re-entry of the NFL into the Los Angeles market will be successful.”
As to the potential timing of a vote on a return to L.A., Richardson said, “Additional work needs to be done before we move forward, but we are confident in our process.”
The process includes at least 24 owners approving any move. Recent suggestions that the inability of either the Rams or Chargers to get the necessary votes have been viewed by some as an effort by Kroenke to delay the process for a year, in the hopes that: (1) the current St. Louis proposal will be deemed not viable; (2) San Diego’s effort to keep the Chargers will be regarded as more viable; and (3) Kroenke’s proposed project at Hollywood Park will be viewed as more inevitable.
The effort to keep the Chargers in San Diego soon will continue, according to one source, with a visit by San Diego’s mayor to owners like Richardson, in an effort to persuade him that the Chargers should be required to stay the course in their current hometown.
As of now, it appears that the Chargers definitely have the votes to block the Rams and that the Rams probably have the votes to block the Chargers. Which means that the NFL will be presiding over potentially delicate and highly political discussions at an upcoming meeting in October and again in December. Those politics likely will include Richardson and other owners firmly opposing the effort of Stan Kroenke to move the Rams to L.A.

Los Angeles Does Not Want, Need NFL Team [Opinion] « CBS Local Sports

Los Angeles Does Not Want, Need NFL Team [Opinion] « CBS Local Sports