Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Players on moving – Farr, Warner, Bruce x2, Slater, Hekker, Holt, Gurley, Proehl
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January 14, 2016 at 1:09 am #37241znModerator
D’Marco Farr, Super Bowl XXXIV Champion
Super Bowl XXXIV champion D’Marco Farr shares his thoughts on the Rams relocating to Los Angeles, recollects his time playing for the franchise in both cities and the gives the fans’ reactions from St. Louis.
January 14, 2016 at 3:23 pm #37282ZooeyModeratorIf this is the same bit I heard live on the radio the other day, Farr said he thought Los Angeles would draw more interest from free agents.
January 14, 2016 at 3:29 pm #37284AgamemnonParticipantJanuary 14, 2016 at 3:48 pm #37291wvParticipantI wonder if they get a better schedule, better refs, all the teams before them pass on a QB? Well, probably not the last one.
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Hmmm. Well they might be allowed
to beat the Patriots now.Ya know. Its probly in the leagues
interest.w
vJanuary 15, 2016 at 7:37 am #37347PA RamParticipantJackie Slater on the Rams moving back to Los Angeles:
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick
January 15, 2016 at 11:53 am #37370znModeratorL.A. story? Kurt Warner having trouble making that connection
http://www.foxsports.com/nfl/story/st-louis-rams-kurt-warner-no-connection-los-angeles-011416
Kurt Warner was the unlikely star during the greatest stretch in the 21-year history of the St. Louis Rams.
A two-time NFL Most Valuable Player and the MVP of Super Bowl XXXIV, Warner admitted he’s having trouble wrapping his head around the idea that if the franchise ever decided to retire his number, it will occur in Los Angeles.
âI definitely donât associate myself with the L.A. Rams … it will be something that Iâm completely unfamiliar with from the organization,â Warner told Arizona Sports 98.7 FM. âIâm very interested in seeing how this all plays out and how you feel as a member of the Rams family, but a member of somewhere else and something different â how that feels and what that looks like going forward.â
Warner not only guided St. Louis to its only Super Bowl title following the 1999 season, but he was at the controls of an offensive juggernaut that produced record-setting numbers from 1999-2001 and earned the moniker “The Greatest Show on Turf.”
The wide-open, high-powered attack had enormous appeal on its own, but St. Louis fans were further capivated by storybook career of Warner, who went from stocking shelves in a supermarket to stints in the Arena Football League and NFL Europe before winding up as the Rams’ surprise starter in the Super Bowl season following an injury to Trent Green.
“Itâs just kind of a weird feeling to think that a huge part of my career and some great memeories were established in St. Louis and now I will probably never go back to see another Rams game in St. Louis and be a part of that,” Warner said. “It will be strange.â
January 15, 2016 at 12:47 pm #37371joemadParticipant
Despite relocation, Rams great Isaac Bruce knows his âRamilyâ will surviveURL – http://www.si.com/nfl/2016/01/14/isaac-bruce-rams-relocation-los-angeles
Isaac Bruce has been through this drill before. The former Rams great, a centerpiece of The Greatest Show on Turf, was a rookie in 1994, the last season the Rams played in Los Angeles. Bruce spent 13 seasons of his illustrious 16-year career in St. Louis, eclipsing 15,000 receiving yards, 1,000 receptions and most importantly, earning a Super Bowl ring with the 1999 team. He remains a community pillar in the region.
As Aaron Donald, Todd Gurley and the current roster of Rams prepare to migrate to Los Angeles, Bruce shares his unique perspective of having made the reverse trip. He also reflects on St. Louis as a city and explains why this isnât a final goodbye for local fans.
Melissa Jacobs: What was your reaction when you heard the news that the Rams were heading back to Los Angeles?
Isaac Bruce: I canât really say I was shocked. Probably the last two years itâs been a cloud of âmaybe the Rams will go back.â I saw what that did, leaving L.A., especially to the Melonheads and die-hard Rams fans there. I also saw what happened when we got to St Louis. It was packed stadiums. Fans were very hungry for football. They were very knowledgeable. They were there through a lot of downs and at the mountaintop. Itâs bittersweet.
Itâs a reminder that the business part of what we do has to be taken care of. Itâs unfortunate that feelings and emotions have to be pushed to the side.
⢠KING: How Stan Kroenke, Rams got the L.A. votes | MAYS: Coin-toss trends
MJ: Do you feel like St. Louis fans provided enough support?
IB: I do. Honestly, I do. From the governor to the politicians to the fans themselves, the public funds that were available were impressive. $200 million is a lot of money. To put something together in that short amount of time and have it sealed, it showed the fortitude, the courage of the people to keep football.
MJ: Has it been hard to see the empty stadiums the past few years?
IB: Itâs been very hard. I knew what could be in that stadium. Iâve experienced great times in that stadium with fans to the rafters. Tickets used to be hard to come by. Just to see opposing fansâ jerseys all over the place, that was kind of sad.
MJ: One of the knocks you would hear about St. Louis as a football town is that it was a baseball town first. Did you feel that?
IB: When we first got to St. Louis, it was pandemonium. It leveled off at one point around when Mark McGwire started doing his thing with the Cardinals. The product is important, and it will be in Los Angeles as well. People like winning. Players like winning. Fans like winning. I like winning.
MJ: How would you describe the emotional connection between the citizens of St. Louis and the Rams?
IB: They experienced the lows and highs when we were rolling. St. Louis was a hard place [for teams] to play when we were winning. You couldnât hear because of the fans being so loud. They made it easier for us. They were on a first-name basis with us. They showed up at every event, supported the foundations that we had. It was a love affair.
MJ: Speaking of foundations, the Isaac Bruce Foundation, which touches the lives of so many, is based in St. Louis. How beneficial has it been to have an actual NFL team there, and are you concerned about any adverse effect the move will have?
IB: What we do is God ordained, and weâre there to make a positive impact in the city of St. Louis and will continue to do that. We expect growth and expansion. My plan when I started this in 2006 was to spill out to other cities, and now we have a platform in Los Angeles.
MJ: I can see how itâs a great opportunity.
IB: Of course. As a franchise, we started in Cleveland, went to Los Angeles, then to St. Louis and back to Los Angeles. Weâre a Ram Nation. Weâre a Ramily. A Rams family. Every city celebrated the Super Bowl in â99. Every city we were in, they considered themselves Rams fans. I donât see that changing.
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MJ: How difficult was it for you to relocate from Los Angeles to St. Louis in 1995?
IB: Youâre talking about a 21-year old coming to St. Louis. I was very immature. I think it probably extended my career being in St. Louis versus being in L.A. at that time.
I had spent two years prior at the junior college in L.A. and then go to St. Louis, a place I didnât know at all. I didnât know what to expect. I had a really good feeling about Los Angeles at the time. I only knew cost of living would be a little lower in St. Louis.
MJ: A little?
IB: Yeah, more than a little bit. So that was a big plus. Other than that, emotionally, itâs hard to see what this does to the fans. My heart is with them and what they gave us. Unfortunately, sooner or later, I donât want to say this will blow over, but a lot of people will forget about it and itâs going to be exciting in Los Angeles.
MJ: How do you feel about [Rams owner] Stan Kroenke?
IB: It takes a strong leader to make tough decisions. You have to do mathematics, add some things up. Heâs a native Missourian, named after two great Cardinals players. My message is that Iâm a Ram for life. I want the best for my organization. I want football people who can take football players and mold them so we can have a winner. Ultimately I think Mr. Kroenke did what was best for the organization. And he did what was best for him.
MJ: Do you think St. Louis will have another football team?
IB: I think itâs a great city. I would hate to see other teams use St. Louis as a place where they threaten to land if they donât get what they want in their city. I can see the city with another team, an expansion team, so they can really establish their own roots, their own legacy and be successful with it.
January 15, 2016 at 1:00 pm #37373wvParticipantJackie Slater on the Rams moving back to Los Angeles:
thats a must-listen for the guys
that remember the LA days.
Slater is great in that one.w
vJanuary 15, 2016 at 1:17 pm #37374nittany ramModeratorL.A. story? Kurt Warner having trouble making that connection
http://www.foxsports.com/nfl/story/st-louis-rams-kurt-warner-no-connection-los-angeles-011416
Kurt Warner was the unlikely star during the greatest stretch in the 21-year history of the St. Louis Rams.
A two-time NFL Most Valuable Player and the MVP of Super Bowl XXXIV, Warner admitted heâs having trouble wrapping his head around the idea that if the franchise ever decided to retire his number, it will occur in Los Angeles.
âI definitely donât associate myself with the L.A. Rams ⌠it will be something that Iâm completely unfamiliar with from the organization,â Warner told Arizona Sports 98.7 FM. âIâm very interested in seeing how this all plays out and how you feel as a member of the Rams family, but a member of somewhere else and something different â how that feels and what that looks like going forward.â
Warner not only guided St. Louis to its only Super Bowl title following the 1999 season, but he was at the controls of an offensive juggernaut that produced record-setting numbers from 1999-2001 and earned the moniker âThe Greatest Show on Turf.â
The wide-open, high-powered attack had enormous appeal on its own, but St. Louis fans were further capivated by storybook career of Warner, who went from stocking shelves in a supermarket to stints in the Arena Football League and NFL Europe before winding up as the Ramsâ surprise starter in the Super Bowl season following an injury to Trent Green.
âItâs just kind of a weird feeling to think that a huge part of my career and some great memeories were established in St. Louis and now I will probably never go back to see another Rams game in St. Louis and be a part of that,â Warner said. âIt will be strange.â
I remember former LA players like Dennis Harrah and Jack Youngblood said the same sorta things when the Rams left LA. Youngblood eventually came around and accepted St. Louis. Hopefully Warner and the other St. Louis greats will do the same.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 10 months ago by nittany ram.
January 15, 2016 at 8:01 pm #37391znModeratorJackson torn about Rams move to Los Angeles
http://www.csnne.com/new-england-patriots/jackson-torn-about-rams-move-los-angeles
FOXBORO — Steven Jackson is one of the most productive players to ever wear a Rams uniform. He spent the first nine years of his career in St. Louis, running for over 1,000 yards in every season but his first.
Now that the Rams will be moving to Los Angeles in 2016, Jackson’s torn. The Patriots running back, signed last month for the season’s stretch run, developed strong connections with the people of St. Louis, and he says that’s where he matured as a man. But he also began watching football up as a kid in Las Vegas, rooting for the LA Rams.
“I grew up as a man in St. Louis,” Jackson said. “Coming in, 20, 21 years old when I was drafted. Spent the majority of my 20s there . . . I grew up as a person and as a man in St. Louis. I’m very fond of that. But at the same time, growing up as a kid, I remember watching LA Rams games. I’m a tough person to answer that question. It’s tough for me.”
Jackson added: “In my opinion, I think every major market city should deserve, and at least have a chance at an NFL organization. But it’s tough, man, because I’m a kid from Las Vegas. I’m torn. It’s very tough for me. I’m a Ram at heart, and it’s tough.”
What makes it especially hard for Jackson is that he knows so many people who have felt a strong bond with the Rams franchise for years. As a part of that community for almost a decade, Jackson knows how difficult it will be for the area to no longer have its team.
“I talk to a lot of people there,” he said. “I still have a home there. I still maintain relationships there, and they’re bummed.”
January 16, 2016 at 12:43 am #37411znModeratorJackie Slater on the Rams moving back to Los Angeles:
thats a must-listen for the guys
that remember the LA days.
Slater is great in that one.w
vSlater is great. Has a perspective few others could have, since he played for 20 years, in both LA and St. Louis.
January 16, 2016 at 5:33 pm #37448znModeratorJohnny Hekker says goodbye to St. Louis with class
http://fox2now.com/2016/01/15/johnny-hekker-says-goodbye-to-st-louis-with-class
ST. LOUIS, MO (KTVI)- Leave it to one of the players who did a lot on the field for the now former St. Louis Rams and in the community here to say goodbye to fans here with class.
Punter Johnny Hekker, who has earned All-Pro status and has also been active in local charitable efforts to fight cancer, bid St. Louis supporters farewell in a Reddit post Thursday. In part it read:
ââŚmany of you are caught with strong feelings of betrayal, hatred, and helplessness for what has become of the team so many of you know and love. I am deeply sorry for what has gone on and just wanted to let you know that from my teammates and myself, we are incredibly grateful for all of the support you have given us over the years. I know I will miss the dome and all of the blue and gold wearing inhabitants; you all are some of the best fans in football. Your support off of the field via social media, public interaction, overall engagement and inclusion of us into the St. Louis community was above and beyond anything we could have hoped for. I made many friends in St. Louis that I will miss dearly. The midwest will always have a special place in my heart and the gateway city is the one to thank. Although I could never embrace some STL traditions, (Imos and gooey butter cake) there are still many things that people in the lou have taught me, showed me, and let me experience that I will never forget.â
Hekker said he hoped the team could win back support from some fans here, even though he recognized that for some it would never happen.
After a Friday afternoon press conference/pep rally welcoming the Rams back to the Los Angeles market, Head Coach Jeff Fisher told ESPN that the move was bittersweet and recognized that fans in St. Louis âhad no say in this,â and went through âa lot of tough times.â
January 17, 2016 at 1:11 am #37482znModeratorFormer “St. Louis” Rams feel the pain of team’s departure
Jim Thomas
When the news came down Tuesday night that the Rams were moving back to Los Angeles, Isaac Bruce was bombarded with texts, emails, and tweets from former teammates.
âJust guys expressing what happened when we played there in St. Louis,â Bruce said. âJust some sentiments, just memories â sharing memories.
âIt went from being sad to a little humorous, because youâll start quoting things, and things that happened in the locker rooms. Things that happened during and after games.â
It was almost analogous to a funeral, which may be apropos, because Bruce and his former Rams teammates were talking about what very well may be the death of professional football in St. Louis.
Bruce has a unique perspective because he played 13 years here for the Rams â longer than anyone else. He was the first âSt. Louisâ Rams star, and also the last âLos Angelesâ Ram left on the roster, having played his rookie season for the LA Rams in 1994, the organizationâs last in southern California before moving to the Midwest.
âI did enjoy LA when I was there,â Bruce said.
But he made his name in St. Louis, and the city will always hold a special place for him.
âFan support was just phenomenal, from the very first time I played a football game here,â Bruce said. âWe didnât play a preseason game that whole 1995 (preseason) in the city of St. Louis.â
The Rams played their first regular season game on the road as well, at Green Bay. And then they came home.
âWe burst on the scene that second week of the season in 1995,â Bruce said. âAnd what I saw really made me feel welcomed into the NFL as far as the fan support was concerned. Most of my games prior to that time, we didnât have much fan support in Los Angeles.â
Although Stan Kroenkeâs relocation application criticized a lack of fan support in St. Louis, that wasnât what Bruce or any of his teammates saw during their time here.
âI donât know about what numbers Kroenke was using to complain about that,â said former Rams center Andy McCollum. âI have no idea. I know when we were here, especially when we were having so much success, it was as good as anywhere in the country.
âAnd even lately, when we were not winning as much, I think thereâs still a lot of fan support. Itâs a shame. I really feel for them.â
Few Rams played as long as McCollum did in St. Louis. For nine seasons, from 1999 through 2007, he called St. Louis home as one of the âDoughnut Bros.â â the nickname given to McCollum and longtime Rams right guard Adam Timmerman. McCollum started 109 games as a Ram over those nine years.
Even before his playing career ended following a one-year stint with Detroit in 2008, McCollum decided to settle down in the Gateway City with his wife and children. The McCollums live in the Eureka area and have three boys and three girls, ages 7 to 17.
McCollum is a financial planner for Resource One Advisors. He helps coach the Eureka High football team and has been involved in coaching the Eureka youth football program for about 10 years.
âWe just liked it here,â McCollum said. âMy wife and I both grew up in Ohio. Itâs a similar feel here. Just a great, great place to raise a family. Itâs nothing more complicated than that.â
As such that puts McCollum in a unique group of Rams who not only played in St. Louis but made the area their permanent home. Some of the others include Aeneas Williams, Grant Williams, and Orlando Pace.
As silly as it may sound, since the relocation vote came down McCollum said many of his friends and neighbors have asked him if heâs moving to LA.
âThat ainât gonna happen,â McCollum said. âItâs not my kind of town.â
Itâs Kroenkeâs kind of town, a place where the Rams owner can add to his already vast fortune and be hailed as the man who returned football to Los Angeles.
(This coming, of course, 21 years after he helped move football out of LA to greener financial pastures in St. Louis with then majority owner Georgia Frontiere.)
Bruce and his other former teammates and coaches from the Greatest Show era obviously feel for the fans of St. Louis. And they recognize the work done by the stadium task force.
âThey once again showed their fortitude, their courage, putting a plan together in so short a time,â Bruce said. âAnd letting America know that St. Louis is a place that can cause Fortune 500 companies, businesses, to flourish. And also professional teams.
âItâs just unfortunate that the business side of it kind of fell on our heads like it did 21 years ago to Los Angeles.â
But Bruce is a positive thinker if nothing else. Heâs aware of the rich tradition of the Rams in Los Angeles, and realizes that playing in such a large market could be an exciting time for the current players.
He plans to open up a branch office, so to speak, of the Isaac Bruce Foundation in LA, while keeping the foundation active in St. Louis.
And he doesnât think the legacy of the Greatest Show will be lost or overlooked now that the franchise is once again calling Los Angeles home.
âI see it this way,â Bruce said. âI donât think Eric Dickersonâs legacy was tainted at all (by the move to St. Louis). Guys like Marshall (Faulk). Guys like Torry (Holt). Like Orlando. These guys are NFL legends. So what they did, and their body of work, is legendary in the NFL in itself.â
One of those Rams legends, Pace, isnât so sure.
âItâs funny. Me and Torry Holt were just having a conversation about that,â Pace said. âI think one of our concerns is what we did here, the fun we had, that championship that we won here â hopefully it doesnât get lost in the move to LA. Because we put a lot of smiles on peopleâs faces, and we enjoyed each other.â
Bruce is doing his best to make sure that legacy lives in St. Louis. Although plans are in its infancy, and there are many details to be ironed out, he hopes to put on a charity game at the Edward Jones Dome involving all former âSt. Louisâ Rams.
âWe want to put together a flag football game, autograph session, for the city of St. Louis â the fans, so they can come out and see the guys up close and personal once again,â Bruce said. âIt may be a while before everyoneâs together like that again.
âSo they can drive to the dome as opposed to flying to another city to see these people.â
January 20, 2016 at 7:17 pm #37764znModeratorJanuary 21, 2016 at 8:58 pm #37861znModeratorFormer Rams WR Isaac Bruce chats with Andy Katz and Rick Klein about the Ramsâ relocation to Los Angeles including the economic and emotional impact on St. Louis, team employees and former players living in the area. Bruce: The move itself is a good move for the Rams, but you leave heartbroken fans and some former players in St.Louis
January 23, 2016 at 11:36 am #37925znModeratorThe Fred Roggin Show
Todd Gurley: Fred and Todd talked about his big rookie year in the NFL and the team’s move to LA. Fred talked about Pete Rose getting inducted into the Cincinnati Reds hall of fame; Does he deserve to be in their hall of fame? Fred took calls asking whether or not Pete Rose belongs in the MLB Hall of Fame / Museum /// Vinny Bonsignore: Fred and Vinny talked about the latest news with the Chargers possibly moving to Los Angeles
January 26, 2016 at 7:24 pm #38115znModeratorRosey Grier, other ex-players sound off on NFL’s return to LA
http://www.pe.com/articles/rams-792776-return-players.html
The former Los Angeles Rams players in attendance for Sunday’s “Welcome Home Rams” party certainly had a lot to say, both about the Rams return to LA and the other potential for the Chargers and Raiders to join them.
Here is a sampling of what the ex-Rams had to say, both about the current state of the NFL in LA and what the future may hold.
Joe Sweet, WR
Rams 1972-73, Chargers 1975
I just left our church before coming here. Our church is in Inglewood, and weâre all very excited about the possibilities and what we can do.
The city needed a team to come back, and what better team to come back than the Rams. They had so much history here. When I was drafted in 1971 we played in the Coliseum, it already had so much history. This is the Rams city, and Iâm glad theyâre back.”
Personally, I would like to see the Chargers stay in San Diego and see the Raiders stay in Oakland.
As a former player as I would attend the various events that weâd do and I knew of some (Chargers) fans from the LA area, but I never thought it was enough to make that move. It wasnât ideal for a new franchise to come here. At least just from my observation, I just donât think theyâd have that many fans even if theyâd move up here alone.
Now with the Rams up here, to try and share that market – I think the market is large enough in terms of population – but there certainly would be some lean years for the Chargers before their fan base picks up.
Rosey Grier, DT
Rams 1963-66
I think itâs great in general for the NFL to be back in LA. Just athletes in general, what we have to do is try to encourage younger players to conduct themselves better on the field. I donât like the things they do to deliberately hurt one another and these are guys that are working for their families. When youâre not playing the game by the rules, then youâre hurting the game, youâre ruining the game. And the young children that watch it, theyâre going to do the same thing on the field themselves. So you have to be a role model, and having role models in the local community will help.
Children will listen to what an athlete says, but youâve got to know who that athlete is. Theyâve got to be aware of the character of the athlete themselves. They are people that are looked up to. Each one has a responsibility. As a minister and former actor and athlete, I would expect this is a great thing for LA.
I also like the fact theyâre giving 30 percent of the jobs to the community. That makes the community really appreciate it, because the community needs that support.
Reggie Doss, DE
Rams 1978-87
Itâs exciting the Rams are coming back. Itâs going to add I think a total new excitement to the southern California area. Weâre seeing a lot of people around letting us know how excited they are.
I kind of knew about the Rams being the team that would come back, just with the background of owner. I thought he was going to be the guy who would really nail it down. The fans have been dying to get a team back here for so many years, and Iâm glad he did.
I think it does help the community more than just the fact of having games being played here. So much positive things happen through the NFL as far as the players are concerned, alongside some of the negative things too, but I think the positives outweigh the negatives. I think it will be a great opportunity for a lot of the players to be impactful in the community, which is needed.
My 10 years playing here it was pretty incredible. Just the atmosphere and the fans and the fanbase that we have. From my first two years when we played in the Coliseum and played in the Super Bowl and then moved to Anaheim, you got to see the entire spectrum of the fans. You saw a ton of fans in Los Angeles and all around. I think that part of it makes it exciting for some of the older guys and what will be exciting for the younger guys.
Greg Bell, RB
Rams 1988-89, Raiders 1990
Thatâs a given how much the news has energized everybody. Look at all the Rams jerseys and Rams paraphernalia around. This is without a doubt en exciting time, for southern California as a whole.
The fact that weâve got the home-based team coming home, and so many of us still live here. Itâs going to be a fun time.
I went to a Rams reunion that Georgia (Frontiere) put on for us in the Coliseum about 15 years ago and it was something so special about that I canât tell you. I was sitting at a table with five guys who played for the Cleveland Rams, and they all lived in Gardena and all lived on one street. That history, thatâs something thatâs going to make this special for the new guys who come in and see the following they have here. Itâs probably three times what they had in St. Louis. To see when that stadium is filled, to see when the Coliseum is filled, thatâs something special.
As a Rams player the only time I got to play in the Coliseum was against the Raiders, and of course I had a great game, but you felt from that stadium what the LA Rams are really about, because that was our home. I think theyâre going to enjoy it for a couple of years until they go to Inglewood.
I think Inglewood is going to turn into the old âCity of Championsâ that it was. If there is one thing I really donât enjoy, I donât enjoy going to Staples Center. Back when Dr. Buss had the Forum and it was the Fabulous Forum, I remember sitting with him and him telling me his desire to be the Rams owner. Itâs something about being the city of champions, something about being in Los Angeles, that the Rams are just going to love.
I tell you what, I spend time up in Oakland with Mark Davis, and the Raiders history is there. The Oakland Raiders rolls smoothly off the tongue. The Los Angeles Raiders never rolled smooth. Itâs just something about the mystique of playing the Raiders. Oakland is really the home of the Raiders, just like San Diego is really the home of the Chargers
I think part of Los Angelesâ lore, like any city, is you want to have one team that is yours, and the Rams have always belonged to Los Angeles.
LeRoy Irvin, CB
Rams 1980-89
You can see the fans are more excited. Iâve been working with the Rams booster club for years, and now theyâre more energized. You see all the people who were Rams fans who became fans of other teams are starting to jump back on the bandwagon. Itâs good for us as players because weâre starting to do things in the community and it also gives us a boost.
Itâs just amazing the Rams are here. Iâm ecstatic about it. Itâs good for us as older players. Itâs good for the community because weâve been in the community for so long without the support of the Rams, and now as they move back and itâs even better for the community.
For 10, 20, years weâve been doing things in the community without the support of the Rams once they left. Now theyâre back, it makes what weâre doing a lot better.
February 4, 2016 at 4:12 pm #38576znModeratorProehl upset over Rams move
Jim Thomas
http://www.stltoday.com/sports/foot…tml?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
SAN FRANCISCO ⢠Carolina wide receivers coach Ricky Proehl and the rest of the Panthers were in the midst of preparations for their playoff opener against Seattle when the news came down: the NFL had approved the relocation of the Rams to Los Angeles.
Proeh’s reaction?
“It (bleeps) me off. Absolutely,” said Proehl, still the brash kid from “Jersey” at age 47. “To me, St. Louis is a great sports town. Great place to raise a family.
“My kids were there for five years _ loved it. My wife loved it. I loved it. It was just a fun place to play. The support of those fans was as good as I ever saw.”
St. Louis may have been good for Proehl during his five seasons with the Rams (1998-2002). But Proehl was also good for St. Louis. Very good.
Never more so than his 30-yard touchdown catch with 4 minutes 44 seconds to play, giving the Rams an 11-6 victory over Tampa Bay in the NFC title game and catapulting the 1999 squad to Super Bowl 34 against Tennessee.
Of course, two years later against New England in Super Bowl 36, Proehl almost did it again. His 26-yard TD catch with 1:30 to play pulled the Rams into a 17-17 tie with the Patriots, who went on to win 20-17 on an Adam Vinatieri 48-yard field goal as time expired.
“That was a special group,” Proehl said Wednesday during Carolina’s Super Bowl 50 media session. “A lot like this (Carolina) team. This team, they love each other, they love love being around each other.
“And that’s how we were in St. Louis. We didn’t care who scored. Played for each other. Blocked downfield.”
And acted like youngsters in the backyard when one of their teammates scored. When Isaac Bruce scored the game-winning touchdown to defeat Tennessee 23-16 in Super Bowl 34, Proehl chased him into the end zone to celebrate.
It was Bruce chasing after Proehl a week earlier, when Proehl’s catch wiped out a 6-5 Tampa Bay lead in an intense slugfest. On an explosive Rams team, it was Proehl’s first TD of the season.
He was considered a role player then, but knew who he was as a player, and what he brought to the table.
“That was special for me,” Proehl said. “That game didn’t surprise me. I was prepared for that game. I was ready. I’d played that game 100 times in my dreams.
“To not have a touchdown all year, and then play in the NFC championship and have six catches for 100 yards and the game-winning touchdown was definitely a dream come true.”
Those are the kind of memories that last a lifetime. Proehl still stays in touch with Bruce, Torry Holt, Az Hakim, and Dre’ Bly (who lives in Charlotte, N.C., home of the Panthers).
The Rams’ relocation vote on Jan. 12 led to another round of texts with former teammates. Now, Proehl is worried that part of that Greatest Show on Turf legacy will get lost in the move to Los Angeles.
“I hope I’m wrong, but I do think it will,” Proehl said. “I hated that I missed it when all the players went back a couple years ago” for a Super Bowl 34 reunion in St. Louis.
Proehl, who is in his fifth season on coach Ron Rivera’s Carolina staff, was working that reunion weekend _ in October 2014.
Sunday’s contest against Denver marks Proehl’s fifth Super Bowl, but his first as a coach. Besides his two Super Bowls with St. Louis, Proehl also played in Super Bowl 38 with Carolina to cap the 2003 season and Super Bowl 41 with Indianapolis (2006).
His playing career lasted 17 seasons, with six clubs, and included 669 catches for 8,878 yards and 54 touchdowns.
Not bad for a “role player.”
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