Rams fans at the game (off the net)

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  • #60320
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    nittany ram

    Coming to you from Gillette Stadium.

    I’ve been to many Rams games where they are the visitors so I have a pretty good idea of how many Rams fans I should see. Usually at least several hundred.

    Ive seen one other fan. ONE.

    Goff truly looked like a rookie against Belichick’s defense. The Rams’ o-line didn’t play well and allowed too much pressure but even when they gave Goff enough time he often held the ball too long. The pocket awareness we saw from Goff was gone in this game but I think that was because he was confused by what he was seeing. His accuracy wasn’t great either. He also threw some nice passes that were dropped though.

    Hekker is their best weapon. How about that 76 yard punt? That was more impressive in person than it would be on TV.

    Overall I thought the defense played pretty well considering they were on the road facing Tom Brady. The Rams offense gave them no help and put them in bad situations a few times.

    At halftime the Patriots had a tribute to the 2001 team that “beat” the Rams in Super Bowl 34. They had a bunch of players from that team on hand and Bob Kraft gave a speech about how the Greatest Show on Turf was defeated by “The Greatest Team on Earth”. During the speech he implied the 2001 Rams were a collection of prima donnas whereas the Pats were a true ‘team’. He said something like only a team committed to hard work and blah, blah, blah, deserves to win the Super Bowl. I turned to my wife and said at a pitch loud enough for everyone around me to hear “by ‘dedicated to hard work’ he means ‘taping their opponents practices’”. The Pats fans around me got quiet for a second and glared at me and I figured I might be in for some trouble but they just let it go.

    eeing the game live has its benefits (you can see how coverages develop, etc) but you miss out on the details. Plus it’s not much fun watching the game surrounded by the enemy. Overall I much prefer watching the game on TV.

    However, I think I will make a pilgrimage to the new stadium when it opens to see a game at some point. Maybe a bunch of us from the board can get together at the new stadium for a ‘Huddlefest’ sometime.

    #60321
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    LMU93

    View from Section 120, Row 21…

    Fun day at Gillette Stadium yesterday. Clear and sunny and about 40 degrees, mild wind. Pretty chilly… Stadium was shaded where were were (closed endzone, 4th row above the field level bar). Ended up seeing more Rams fans than we expected, I’d guess 50-60 so maybe a couple hundred in the stadium. The father and son next to our seats were also Rams fans. They met Tyler Higbee’s mom at a Dunkin Donuts before the game.

    My own perspectives up close…

    Pretty tame crowd, I have to say. Honestly, probably spoiled… Late arriving, not nearly as loud as the Superdome. People in our section chatting and not watching and walking around the concourses a lot. Also quite a few more inebriated people than the Saints game… Not much grief from Patriots fans. A few “maybe next year” or “hey look, a Rams fan!” comments on the way out. Guy behind me (very drunk) taps me on the shoulder (wearing my #85 jersey) during the game and slurs “whoooosss Youngblood?…” He had to be at least 40 and I just said “Really?..”

    Offense: Weather was a factor in that I think the receivers had a hard time with catching a cold ball. The football is hard in the cold and I don’t think they were prepared. Not an excuse as we all saw the 4-5 drops. And it’s not like it was 20 degrees. But it is what it is. Quick was the only WR that really showed anything at all, though he had a couple more he should have come down with.

    By the way, at the 2:00 warning (4th and 11) I got up to go to the bathroom. Come back and the Rams are at the 2-yard line right in front of me. I missed the pass to Britt. Typical…..

    Goff was slightly off, not nearly as sharp in his timing as I saw at the Superdome last Sunday. A crossing pattern to Cooper was a foot behind him vs. a foot in front, etc. Still holding the ball too long hoping something comes open, very typical of a rookie, but 3 of the 4 sacks were because of that. But also again very calm, not rattled, seemed in command of the “offense.”

    There’s just no beating around the bush. The Rams offensive line is really bad. I mean really. Bad. Patriots TV and radio analysts after the game and this morning are amazed at how poor that unit is. This team is all in on Goff and Gurley so the offseason personnel upgrades have to start there.

    I watched different OL a lot on drives closer to us. From what I saw in person I think Havenstein and Brown are keepers. They missed Saffold though honestly not sure how much of a difference he’d have made. I think Wichmann may be best suited to slide to center. Robinson and Barnes need to be replaced. Actually with Barnes I’d equate him to Keenum- he’s a good guy you’d like to have on the team and can handle spot starting, but he’s just not a starting NFL player. Make him the backup center and lose Rhaney. Blocking in general didn’t pick up blitzes well. As in almost at all…

    I hate to say it but when Kendricks dropped that pass that got picked off I knew the game was over. I had said all week that the only way the Rams stay close is with zero turnovers. They were going to lose no matter what because of Brady and coaching but it could have been more respectable if the receivers at least held onto the ball. I don’t think they missed Austin, honestly. I was glad to see Cooper get playing time.

    Defense: I’ll start by saying Matt Longacre is better than Eugene Sims at RDE. He is. He’s a better pass rusher, faster. Sims blew outside contain a couple times and outside contain in general as a team was sloppy. That’s how Blount scored that opening TD.

    Seeing the game in person if anything the Rams were the more physical team (on defense vs. Patriots offense). And their run defense was good apart from that busted outside contain on Blount’s TD.

    The defense really wasn’t bad at all apart from that run and the TD pass to Hogan which was near us and just a beautiful throw… They really did settle down and play well after that 2nd TD. The Rams defense was more physical than the Patriots. Credit Brady for still at age 39 being able to slide around in the pocket and avoid 2-3 sacks. Westbrooks was probably our most disruptive DL Sunday. Pass rush overall was again not very good. Of course the Patriots game planned by having so many quick and short throws to negate it but when Brady did drop back he wasn’t harassed the way the Rams needed to. I’m not sure if Quinn would have helped much but sure would have been nice to have him in there of course (especially instead of Sims). Donald wasn’t as disruptive as I thought he’d be. The Patriots also clearly were looking ahead and wanted to manage Brady’s knee issue this week.

    I thought Joyner, Barron and McDonald had good games. I didn’t notice when #35 Jordan came in but once I did I watched him. He wasn’t bad in the face of clearly getting picked on by Brady and WR Malcolm Mitchell. Didn’t allow any big plays, kept things in front of him. Defended one pass.

    When your offense puts that much stress on you as a defense plus you’re playing Tom Brady on the road you’re in a tough spot. I thought this could have been something like a 27-16 game if the Rams didn’t turn the ball over and it looked that way to me in person.

    Special teams: Hekker is special…. He really is. And Marquez is a fabulous gunner and special teams player.

    That’s about it. As I said last week it speaks to where I am as a fan because I did have a lot of fun at both the Saints and Patriots games. But I’ll be glad to be home next Sunday watching the Falcons game….

    #60324
    sanbagger
    Participant

    Here’s one from Dewey-Cheatum-and How

    Ex Ram fan that changed allegiance when the Rams left STL.

    I was on the sunny side of the stadium – it went into shadow in the middle of the 3rd quarter. While the sun was on me it was gorgeous. In the shade, I kinda wished I’d had some gloves, but was still not bad. Probably low- to mid-40’s, which up here is not bad for December (it’s currently 29 and snowing).

    Tom did spend much of the game taking the underneath routes – the few times he went deep, the Rams’ secondary did a nice job of contesting the pass. I give the Rams’ D lots of credit for limiting the Pats to FGs on four drives – only allowing two TDs to this offense, even without Gronk, should be considered a positive day.

    McDonald looked to me to be the best player on the field at almost all times. He hit hard, covered well, seemed to be everywhere. I feel like he deserves credit for keeping about 8 more points off the board – two drives at least that would have resulted in points without his personal interdiction.

    Also, Joyner looked really good, hit the snot out of Lewis (I think it was Lewis) at one point. Lewis bounced back like a foot and a half, ended up being dropped when the rest of the Rams D arrived, but Joyner put a walloping on him

    • This reply was modified 8 years ago by sanbagger.
    #60330
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I’m not sure what the answer is for the online but clearly the Rams will have to access that in the off season and see what can be salvaged and come up with a plan for it going forward. It is, to me, the number one priority going into the off season.

    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick

    #60337
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    DCH

    Honestly, the drops in the first couple drives really set the tone. The Pats pinned their ears back and went after Goff for the rest of the game, and the Rams D never spent more than a couple of minutes getting their breath on the sidelines.

    Goff has talent to work with – he should have been sacked way more than 4 times. His scrambling ability is going to help him a lot as the Rams’ offense grows. That said, he’s a rookie, and he played like one against a complex defense designed to confuse him. But he would have performed much better if not for:

    Kenny Britt. Holy hell. The season he’s been having, I did NOT expect him to completely stink up the joint. Snagging a bomb against the Pats’ second stringers doesn’t really make up for the fact that he killed – singlehandedly – a lot of drives early in the game when the Rams needed to keep the offense on the field and the D on the sideline.

    Honorable mention to Kendricks, who is solely responsible for Goff’s first INT of the day.

    Higbee looked pretty big, fast and catch-y when they tried to get him the ball. I don’t know if the OC knows how to use him, but he does pass the eyeball test as a weapon at TE.

    Gurley seems lost, and part of that is a lack of opportunities. Last year, even when he was averaging 3-ish YPC, he was being fed the ball, was breaking tackles (he did a bit of that yesterday), and was good to rip off a 40+ yarder at any point in time. Blocking was bad, and he’s not as hard to tackle as he was, but he’s also not getting enough carries to wear down a front seven and rip off a biggie. Also, the Patriots gave the Rams’ passing game zero respect, threw delayed blitzes and run blitzes and dared Goff and the passing game to beat them.

    The Rams’ D looked really good, aside from the long Blount run. They held the Pats to 3 on many drives, and you could tell from the stands that they were getting worn down and pissed off as the game wore on.

    McDonald might have been the best player on either defensive unit. He flew all over the place, made big hits (that involved actually tackling the ballcarrier) and seemed to be a factor against the pass. You need to re-sign him. Alexander is good; McD looked like a game-changer.

    I kept hearing Michael Jordan’s name called over the PA, for good things – defending a pass, making a tackle. He looked decent out there, and the Pats were unable to get any long passes completed as the game went along.

    Johnny Hekker is the best punter I’ve ever seen play the game of football.

    Quick showed up a couple times. His catch (that was initially called not a catch) was SICK, and when we were watching the replay, we all agreed – damn, it was a catch, and what a catch at that.

    Cooper doesn’t seem to bring much, but he didn’t get used much, so the jury is out.

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