Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Keenum … going into week 1
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September 9, 2016 at 12:44 am #52481znModerator
http://www.rotoworld.com/player/nfl/7696/case-keenum
NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport reports the Broncos “kept tabs” on Rams QB Case Keenum this summer, and that the sides had trade talks.
It’s highly unsurprising, as Keenum broke into the league under coach Gary Kubiak, making eight starts in 2013. Talks presumably broke down once the Rams realized No. 1 overall pick Jared Goff wasn’t going to be anywhere near ready for Week 1. Keenum isn’t many things, but he’s definitely a better option than Trevor Siemian. Sep 8 – 6:16 PM
Source: Ian Rapoport on TwitterSeptember 9, 2016 at 4:25 pm #52500Isiah58ParticipantI think there are two reasons why these talks went nowhere.
First, Denver offered a fourth round pick for Kappernick in the offseason, but SF wanted a 2nd. It is unlikely John Elway would have given up more than a 4th for Keenum since nothing has changed from Denver’s point of view.
Second, it is likely the Rams will let Keenum walk after the year to begin the Goff era. If a team gives Keenum a contract, the Rams would get a compensatory pick. If he plays decently, it might be a substantial contract, which could net the Rams a 4th round compensatory pick. So they can keep Keenum this year and get basically what Denver was offering next year.
So unless Denver was offering something outrageous, which was very unlikely, the Rams were probably never interested in a trade of Keenum.
“Marge, don't discourage the boy! Weaseling out of things is important to learn. It's what separates us from the animals! Except the weasel.” - Homer Simpson
September 9, 2016 at 4:44 pm #52504AgamemnonParticipantSeptember 10, 2016 at 11:48 am #52558znModeratorRams QB Case Keenum gearing up for first Week 1 start
Alden Gonzalez
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — The backdrop was carried into the locker room, Case Keenum took his place in the middle of it and a mob of media members swelled around him late Thursday afternoon, four days before the Los Angeles Rams will open their season. Then came the first question …
Case, your first NFL start. What’s it like?
“Well … it’s my 16th NFL start, just so you know,” Keenum said. “So, I have done it before.”
Yes, in case anybody forgot, he has. But Keenum has only ever been the guy by default, starting with the Houston Texans because Matt Schaub injured a foot and an ankle in 2013, and starting for the Rams because Nick Foles wasn’t good enough in 2015. This is the summer when Keenum actually won a job, holding off a developing No. 1 pick to do it.
This is the summer when Keenum will finally start a regular-season opener — on Monday Night Football, against the division-rival San Francisco 49ers, in the first meaningful game back in Los Angeles.
“It’s the first time for it to be my show starting out, and not just taking over like, ‘Oh crap, send out Case now,'” Keenum said. “It’s been something I’ve prepared for for a long time. I’m excited. I really am.”
Keenum left Houston as the NCAA’s all-time leader in passing yards, touchdowns and completions, but a relatively small stature and a weak throwing arm left him undrafted in 2012.
He spent that season buried on the Texans’ practice squad, then started eight games in 2013, throwing for 1,760 yards with nine touchdowns and six interceptions. Keenum spent a chunk of the next year on the Rams’ practice squad, then returned to the Texans, started the final two regular-season games, winning both. He returned to the Rams for a seventh-round pick in March 2015.
Keenum went on to supplant Foles, the man he was brought in to back up, and returned from a concussion to start the final four games last season, a stretch in which he threw for 692 yards, completed nearly 65 percent of his passes and led the Rams to three victories.
In the eight months that followed, the Rams have seen continued growth.
“Every week seeing just more and more command of the offense, which is comforting,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said of Keenum. “He’s going to get up there and make the right decision. The position itself is hard to play, but he’s going to give us a chance with checking in and out of run stuff, changing protections, getting the ball down the field, making plays, extending plays with his legs.”
Keenum is coming off a solid preseason, one that saw him complete 75 percent of his passes without committing a single turnover.
That’s all the Rams really need from the 28-year-old: just enough to keep opposing defenses from stacking the box against star running back Todd Gurley.
But Keenum starting is in no way an ideal scenario for the Rams. He shoulders a 38.2 QBR that is the fifth worst among quarterbacks who have attempted at least 400 passes over the past three seasons. And the guy the Rams truly want ready, of course, is Jared Goff, the first overall pick who cost an assortment of high-round draft choices for the right to select him.
Keenum hasn’t forgotten that.
The line of questioning won’t let him.
“I’m still batting a thousand,” Keenum said. “Every interview I’ve ever done, somebody has asked [about Goff]. It is what it is. I compartmentalize it. People are going to ask what they want to ask. He was the first pick of the draft. Obviously some attention there, but I’m just going to go out and do my job. My job is to be the quarterback of this team and get the ball in the right people’s hands and convert on third downs and score points.”
September 10, 2016 at 11:50 am #52559znModeratorKeenum Ready for 1st Opening-Day Start
Myles Simmons
When the 2015 season ended, quarterback Case Keenum had helped stabilize the Rams’ offense by coming in and winning three of the last four games at signal-caller. The Houston product’s performances in those four games earned him Los Angeles’ starting role to at least begin the offseason program.
But since then, Keenum has clearly seized the opportunity in front of him. Yes, quarterback Jared Goff was taken No. 1 overall and will ascend to QB-1 in due time. But until he does, Keenum has displayed he can effectively command the offense. Because of that, he’s earned the first opening-day start of his career.
“It’s exciting,” Keenum said. “It’s Monday Night Football. It’s a divisional opponent.
“It’s my first my time for it to be ‘my show’ starting out, and not just taking over — like, “Oh [no], send out Case now,’” Keenum continued, laughing.
Keenum dons a funny-guy persona when at the podium, but the reality of Keenum’s journey to Rams opening-day starter has a bit more depth.
“We traded for Case — people forget that. But we wanted to get him because of his ability,” head coach Jeff Fisher said. “He’s done a great job this offseason, in the preseason games. … He’s ready to go.”
Keenum has a laid-back personality, which the media gets to see with his demeanor in press conferences. According to wide receiver Tavon Austin, that’s the way he is all the time — and it makes a difference in building relationships. Keenum was voted a captain for the first time in his career.
“Case has done a good job whenever he stepped in, from last year to now,” Austin said. “We’re not just teammates with Case — we’re definitely real brothers. And he fights for us just like we’re going to fight for him.”
Still, being “the guy” at quarterback for an entire offseason and training camp has certainly been different for Keenum.
“When I go talk to receivers now, it’s like, ‘Hey, this is how we should do this. This is how I want it, how do you want it?’ Instead of, ‘Hey, let me go ask somebody else and we’ll see how they want it,’” Keenum said.
Those are the kinds of minor factors that can make a major difference during games. But Keenum’s feel for the Rams’ offense has undoubtedly helped him take steps in his progression this year.“Every week, you’re seeing more and more command of the offense, which is comforting,” Fisher said. “He’s going to get up there and make the right decisions. The position itself is hard to play, but he’s going to give us a chance with checking in and out of run stuff, changing protections, getting the ball down the field, making plays, [and] extending plays with his legs.”
“He’s one of those guys who you know what you’re getting day-in and day-out, but I think he’s progressed — gotten more comfortable with us, just like we’ve gotten more comfortable with him,” center Tim Barnes said.
There may be no more important connection than the one between center and quarterback on the field. Barnes said he’s particularly noticed how the communication between he and Keenum has improved with the Houston product taking the vast majority of first-team reps.
“That’s a big thing, is we’ve been able to do that the whole time,” Barnes said. “For the most part, we’ve been able to be there with each other and know what we’re thinking.”
Of course, Keenum’s final start of 2015 came against the same team at the same venue where the Rams will begin this season. The major difference being now, the 49ers are coached by Chip Kelly.
The Rams have been watching all kinds of film at their disposal in order to prepare, such as Cleveland’s defense from last year. Niners defensive coordinator Jim O’Neil held the same position with the Browns in 2015.
“It’s a different team than the two games we played against them last year. A lot of the same players, but different schemes,” Keenum said. “It does make it a little bit of a challenge to go back and watch and maybe different coordinator’s defense and see — you don’t look at personnel, but you maybe look at schemes and what they’re trying to do defensively.
“But it’s like any first game,” Keenum added. “They can throw anything at you.”
Given the magnitude of the game — the Rams’ first contest representing Los Angeles in two decades, and Keenum’s first opening-day start — it’s fair to expect Keenum to be juiced for it. As much as quarterbacks usually like to be even-keel, Keenum knows himself and the parts of his own personality he’ll have to embrace.
“I’m going to get excited no matter what,” Keenum said. “That’s who I am.”
If this game goes how the rest of 2016 has so far for the QB, Keenum should be able to efficiently lead the Rams’ offense to success against their division rival.
“I’m just coming out and doing my job, and my job is to be the quarterback of this team, to get the ball in the right people’s hands, convert on third downs, and score points,” Keenum said. “So that’s my job and I’m going to come in every day and work on doing that.”
September 10, 2016 at 1:54 pm #52570bnwBlockedI think there are two reasons why these talks went nowhere.
First, Denver offered a fourth round pick for Kappernick in the offseason, but SF wanted a 2nd. It is unlikely John Elway would have given up more than a 4th for Keenum since nothing has changed from Denver’s point of view.
Second, it is likely the Rams will let Keenum walk after the year to begin the Goff era. If a team gives Keenum a contract, the Rams would get a compensatory pick. If he plays decently, it might be a substantial contract, which could net the Rams a 4th round compensatory pick. So they can keep Keenum this year and get basically what Denver was offering next year.
So unless Denver was offering something outrageous, which was very unlikely, the Rams were probably never interested in a trade of Keenum.
Thanks for explaining that. Good post!
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