reporters on camp – 7/30

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  • #49819
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    Practice Report 7/30: Day 1 in L.A.

    Myles Simmons

    The Rams got their first training camp back in Southern California started in front of over 10,000 loud and energetic fans on a sunny Saturday afternoon in Irvine.

    Here are a few of the top storylines for July 30.

    BRINGING THE ENERGY

    There’s always a little extra juice for the first day of training camp. But given all the Rams have gone through since the end of the 2015 season, it’s easy to understand why the players would be hyped up to begin Saturday’s practice.

    “We talked to the players about it last night — that there was a chance that there were going to be quite a few people here. And they were really excited,” head coach Jeff Fisher said. “As a matter of fact, we gathered them up right before we got started just to calm them down.

    “When the atmosphere is the way it was, [with] the fans, and the support — there’s a tendency to go a little bit quicker earlier in practice than you should,” Fisher added. “And I just encouraged them to make sure they got warmed up and got to full speed so we didn’t have any issues.”

    Once that happened, Los Angeles was able to get down to business. Fisher said he was pleased with the way Day 1 went, noting the players did well to stay in shape between the end of the offseason program and camp check-in.

    “The [conditioning] tests were better than I’ve ever seen,” Fisher said.

    Fisher said he thinks one reason the players started camp that way is because they developed a strong bond during OTAs. The uniqueness of the situation — where many players were living at the Oxnard facility — made the offseason program a little more like training camp. That in turn brought the team closer, and made players want to stick around the L.A. area to train together — despite the Rams not having their own facility during the interim period.

    “As you know, we really didn’t have a place where they could work,” Fisher said. “They selected three of four facilities here in town, and they just stayed in town, and they just worked. And our conditioning tests reflected that.”

    We’ll see how all that translates once games begin, but it doesn’t hurt to get off to a good start.

    GOFF’S FIRST DAY

    Rookie quarterback Jared Goff is known for being a particularly even-keel person. But on the day of his first training camp practice, even he felt some butterflies.

    “A little bit, yeah,” Goff said. “It’s your first training camp practice — similar to my first rookie minicamp practice and my first OTA practice. And now [we’re] into training camp, and we’re starting the actual football season now, so it’s kind of the same feeling. You go out there and you kind of get the jitters out and get comfortable.”

    Goff was one of the players who stayed in Southern California during the break, and Fisher said he could tell the Cal product made some good strides in that period.

    “He spent a lot of time — as you would expect from him — in the book this summer, throwing to the receivers,” Fisher said. “He has a much better feel now than he did when he left.”

    “I definitely feel 10-times more comfortable — much more comfortable with everything that we do,” Goff said.

    As training camp goes along, Fisher said the most important thing for Goff is to make progress. It’s clichéd for a reason — the rookie needs to take strides and improve a bit each day.

    “He gets the huddle, he gets his teammates — he gets that stuff,” Fisher said. “He understands what’s ahead. It’s just the reps and getting the experience. Completing balls and making decisions — and making mistakes.

    “You can’t expect anybody to go through a mistake-free camp,” Fisher continued. “And he’s not going to either, particularly because, as you know, you learn from it. You need to experience those things. So you need to experience those things, and they’re OK right now.”

    And for the even-keel Goff, that falls right in line for how he carries himself in the field and in the classroom.

    “I think I just want to get comfortable,” Goff said of his camp goals. “Get ready to go, and get ready to play, and get ready to hopefully help this team as best I can.”

    EXTRA POINTS

    — Earlier this week, Los Angeles placed Rob Havenstein on the preseason physically unable to perform list with a foot injury. He’s able to come off it at any time before the regular season kicks in, but Fisher said it may be a little while before that happens.

    “Rob’s had a little foot issue during the offseason, and he’s still not quite ready,” Fisher said. “So, [with] PUP — this situation can be week-to-week [or] day-to-day. Really don’t have much more information on it. But it’s going to be some time — maybe a few weeks before Rob gets back. He’s working very, very hard.”

    — After an excused absence for the offseason program, safety T.J. McDonald is back for training camp. He said on Saturday he’s learned not to take anything for granted, especially when it comes to playing the game he loves. One of the toughest parts about the whole situation was not being able to improve with his teammates every day.

    “Anybody who knows me knows how much I love ‘ball, so it was tough being away,” McDonald said. “But, I’m back now and I’m having a great time. Just trying to get better and hopefully will get in a good season this year.”

    — Closing the book on Nick Foles, Fisher said the team and the player were able to come to an agreement that worked out well for both parties. L.A. released Foles earlier this week.

    “It was a good situation for us and Nick,” Fisher said. “We’ve been talking to his people throughout the offseason and kind of felt like this was the direction we’re heading. And we got a good deal worked out so Nick has an opportunity to go on with his career, and we have an opportunity to move forward with some very talented young quarterbacks.”

    — Finally, Fisher noted Los Angeles has placed running back Tre Mason on the Reserve/Did Not Report list.

    “It was our only option,” Fisher said. “I haven’t personally spoken with Tre since the season ended — when we had the check-out physicals. I tried numerous times after the incident to reach him, and I was unsuccessful. Been communicating through the offseason with his agent, Bus Cook, had minimal conversation with family members. But Tre has made a decision not to communicate with us — not to talk, not talking to his teammates.

    “Right now we’re more concerned with Tre Mason’s wellbeing than we are his football career,” Fisher continued. “We’re going to continue to try to reach him to see where he’s at. But right now, the best thing for us to do is to put him on a did not report list, so he does not count against our 90-man roster.”

    #49820
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    Rams get warm welcome on first day of camp

    Jim Thomas

    IRVINE, Calif. • Ray Khoury, 16, and his three football teammates from El Dorado High School were the first ones in line — 8:30 in the morning, or a mere seven hours before the start of Rams practice.

    “My dad’s been a fan since they were in LA originally,” said Khoury, wearing Chris Long’s original jersey as a Ram, No. 72. “My dad always told me they were coming back. Growing up, he’d tell me don’t cheer for the Rams. We need them to lose. They’re not going to move a winning team back to LA.”

    The Rams did their part in St. Louis, posting 12 consecutive non-winning seasons before NFL owners bowed to Stan Kroenke’s wallet and stadium plan, and approved the move back to Los Angeles after 21 seasons in the Midwest.

    Khoury said he’s been hearing the “Rams are moving back” mantra from his dad for about six years.

    “So when it actually happened, I was shocked,” Khoury said.

    Turns out Dad was right. To the pain and chagrin of many in St. Louis, the Rams opened training camp Saturday at the University of California, Irvine.

    Besides the El Dorado gang, there were about a dozen fans hanging out by the practice entrance by about 10 a.m., with more showing up as the morning went by. The gates to the practice fields — which are converted soccer fields — didn’t open until 2 p.m.

    Few were as hyped up as Bobby Stephen, 53, of Huntington Beach. Wearing a Jack Youngblood jersey, Stephen was so excited, he sounded as if he were, oh, a little over-caffeinated.

    “I couldn’t root for them when they moved to St. Louis,” Stephen said. “I just couldn’t root for them. When the Rams moved back here, oh man!”

    Stephen said he has been watching tapes of old LA Rams games almost continuously since then.

    “At home, every night. Till midnight,” said Stephen, who works for a direct mail marketing firm. “Just ask my kids. I’m all pumped.”

    But he didn’t watch a second of the Rams’ Super Bowls in St. Louis, when they were known as the Greatest Show on Turf.

    “I didn’t care,” Stephen said. “No. My boy called me Bandwagon Dad because when the Rams left I didn’t care.

    Others did, like Fernando Gudino, 57, of Whittier.

    “I’ve been a fan since Roman Gabriel, Deacon Jones,” said Gudino, a flooring subcontractor. “If you’re a fan, that’s your team. We have no control if an owner decides to take ’em (elsewhere).”

    So Gudino, who came with his son Nathan, 19, said he felt for the fans in St. Louis.

    “I do, I do,” he said. “Because you know, we went through it. In reality, the Rams were from Cleveland I believe. So we all know what it feels like. We have no control over it.”

    Others weren’t so empathetic.

    “Not really, they took them from us,” said one of the El Dorado High football players.

    Others shouted, “The Rams are back! The Rams are back!” as the gates opened at 2 p.m. and hundreds of fans streamed out to the practice field bleachers.

    Many wore “LA” Rams gear. There were a lot of Todd Gurley jerseys, with a few Marshall Faulks, Isaac Bruces, and Kurt Warners sprinkled in.

    A souvenir stand just inside the gate even had a Torry Holt jersey for sale. The Warner jerseys had yet to arrive, said Jen Hertzberg of Legends Hospitality, a concessionaire service partly owned by Kroenke pal Jerry Jones, the Dallas Cowboys owner who helped get the Rams to LA.

    At 3 p.m.. or a half hour before the start of practice, a roar went up when the first Rams player walked out on the field.

    “Who’s No. 34?” wondered one fan.

    It was Chase Reynolds, special teams ace.

    When all was said and done, the Rams announced the attendance as 10,112. But over the last 45 minutes of practice, as the Rams moved to the other side of the practice field, what became the far side of bleachers emptied as fans left early. Anyone who has ever been to a Dodgers game has seen this happen.

    Operating in a much bigger area than training camp at Earth City, there were concession stands behind one end zone, a first aid station, inflatables for the kids to crawl on, and rather oddly, an information tent to join the Inglewood, Calif., police department.

    Behind the opposite end zone were VIP tents, including one for family and friends of players. And one for former Rams players. Among those in the player tent were former LA Rams quarterback Jim Everett, Hall of Fame offensive tackle Jackie Slater (who played one game for the St. Louis Rams in 1995), and quarterback Dave Barr (who suddenly is everywhere).

    Yes, the same Dave Barr who scored the last Rams touchdown in the Dome at America’s Center at last week’s Legends of the Dome game. He lives and works in nearby Torrance.

    “The whole event was a thrill, and what a way to cap it,” said Barr, referring to the Legends game and his TD.

    Former defensive tackle D’Marco Farr was on hand, and so was fullback James “The Hammer” Hodgins, who coaches high school football in the San Francisco area. So was Hall of Fame running back Marshall Faulk, who was here working for the NFL Network.

    There were no sightings of Kroenke, aka Malibu Stan. (He undoubtedly will be staying at his Malibu home more often now that the Rams are in California.)

    Lucia Rodriguez, the daughter of late Rams owner Georgia Frontiere and brother of Chip Rosenbloom, was in attendance. She now goes by Lucia Rosenbloom.

    While happy to see the Rams in California, she said, “I miss St. Louis, I really do. I feel for St. Louis.”

    The largely boisterous crowd turned dark late in practice, when quarterback Jared Goff had problems with a center exchange and then threw an interception over the middle to safety Cody Davis.

    On the first day of training camp for the LA Rams, the crowd booed Goff, the No. 1 overall draft pick.

    “C’mon Goff, you’re in LA!” yelled one fan, a reminder that the fan base figures to be more fickle here than in St. Louis.

    Starting right tackle Rob Havenstein was not at practice and may miss a few weeks. He’s on the physically unable to perform list while a fractured toe (from offseason conditioning) fully heals.

    And no one in the Rams organization knows exactly what’s up with running back Tre’ Mason. Coach Jeff Fisher said he has been unable to contact Mason, who has had off-field issues, since the end of last season. Mason was placed on the reserve/did not report list Saturday.

    But that didn’t dampen the day for Fisher or his team, which is back in California for the first time since 1994. After the Rams’ first practice back in LA, Fisher spoke to a media crowd only slightly larger than what was the norm for the first day of camp in St. Louis.

    “It was great to come out of the locker room if you will and see the fans and see the stands full,” Fisher said. “We’ve got a lot of work to do. We’ve got a long way to go with this football team. The atmosphere’s certainly gonna help.

    “We gathered (the players) up just before we got started, just to kind of calm them down. When the atmosphere’s the way it was and the environment, and the fans and the support, there’s that tendency to go a little bit more quicker earlier in practice than you should.

    “I just encouraged them to make sure they got warmed up so we didn’t have any issues.”

    #49824
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    First LA Rams practice attended by 10K fans

    By Rich Hammond,

    http://www.dailynews.com/sports/20160730/first-la-rams-practice-attended-by-10k-fans

    IRVINE >> The first loud cheers came when quarterback Jared Goff jogged onto the field Saturday. The first loud groans came an hour later, when Goff badly underthrew a pass for an interception.

    This is now normal life for the Rams, who are followed by television cameras everywhere they walk on the UC Irvine campus. Given the stakes, they might as well be starring on The Goff Channel.

    “Walking on the field was cool, seeing all the people out here,’’ Goff said. “There were people yelling and screaming. It’s awesome to be back in L.A. with what looks like to be a pretty big fan base.”

    According to the team, 10,112 fans attended Saturday’s free practice, the Rams’ first training-camp session in Southern California since 1994. They stood outside for hours before gates opened, then filled temporary bleachers wearing jerseys and carrying signs for a team that has returned after 22 years.

    The stars, most notably running back Todd Gurley and defensive tackle Aaron Donald, received loud cheers when they entered the field, but the roar for Goff reached a different decibel.

    That’s not unexpected. Not only is Goff, drafted in April with the No. 1 overall pick, a new homegrown star, but soon he will be counted upon to lead a Rams offense that needs improvement if the Rams are to make the playoffs for the first time since 2004.

    So how did it go? Goff started out taking second-team reps behind Case Keenum but also got first-team work. The playcalling for both quarterbacks was rather conservative, apparently by design, but Goff made the big mistake when his pass landed softly in the hands of backup safety Cody Davis.

    “It was OK,” Goff said of his first training-camp practice. “There’s stuff you always want to work on. I felt good about a lot of plays and there’s some plays you want back. That will be the way it is for a long time. In college, I would try to be 100 percent every day, and you probably never do it.”

    There’s plenty of time for improvement. The Rams will hold 20 more practices in Irvine, plus four preseason games, and there’s no timetable for naming a starting quarterback. Also, Saturday’s practice was held without pads or tackling.

    “This is the first day of installation,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said. “Today, the ball wasn’t designed to go down the field. It was underneath, short passes.”

    That didn’t give the thousands of fans much of a chance to cheer for dynamic plays, but they seemed to appreciate the Rams’ presence, and vice versa.

    Donald, among other players, stopped as he jogged into practice to sign autographs and take selfies with fans who lined the field, and Fisher said he felt the need to calm down the players because of the presence of the large crowd. The mid-afternoon heat also helped.

    “I was so tired today that I couldn’t even hear half the people,” Gurley said with a laugh. “I was just trying to get my wind back.”

    MCDONALD IN, MASON OUT

    T.J. McDonald, who missed optional practices in June after his May arrest, took first-team reps at strong safety but backup running back Tre Mason, arrested in March for reckless driving, resisting arrest and marijuana possession, was placed on the “did not report” list.

    McDonald declined to discuss his arrest (on suspicion of non-alcohol DUI) or the case. The Los Angeles City Attorney’s office has not yet decided whether to charge McDonald with a crime. The Rams kept McDonald away from the OTA practices but allowed him to return for training camp.

    “I knew that I would be able to be in shape to be here in camp and be able to come out and play ball,” McDonald said. “There was no doubt in my mind.”

    Fisher said regarding Mason: “Tre has made a decision not to communicate with us, not to talk. He’s not talking to teammates. Right now, we’re more concerned about Tre Mason’s well being than his football career. We’re going to continue to try to reach him and see where he’s at.”

    HAVENSTEIN HURT

    Fisher said starting right tackle Rob Havenstein, placed on the “physically unable to perform” list this week, is recovering from “a little foot injury during the offseason and he’s still not ready.”

    Fisher said Havenstein, who was on the field watching practice, could miss two weeks. Rodger Saffold, usually a starting guard, moved to right tackle in first-team reps while Cody Wichmann played guard.

    #49825
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    Rams’ first official practice since their return to L.A. is a reality show, in the best sense

    Bill Plaschke

    http://www.dailypress.com/la-sp-rams-plaschke-201607230-snap-story.html

    This whole business about the Rams returning to Los Angeles?

    It just got real.

    On a cloudless, scorching Saturday afternoon at UC Irvine, it filled bleachers surrounding two makeshift football fields with nearly 10,000 folks who sprinted to their seats early and stood screaming for autographs late.

    All for a Rams event that had no score, no statistics and no drama.

    It was just a practice. It was just a dummy-thumping, horn-rattling, saggy-sweats practice.

    But this being the Rams’ first training-camp practice as a Los Angeles franchise in 22 years, it was horned gold.

    “The people in St. Louis were like, we can’t root for the Rams because we’ll all be at the beach . . . well, I guess not,” said Randy Troy, a member of the former Bring Back the Los Angeles Rams group and one of many fans wearing a sweaty jersey and a sunscreen smile.

    They cheered calisthenics. They cheered field-goal drills. They cheered dudes making flying interceptions of intentionally lofted passes that they were supposed to intercept.

    “This whole scene is amazing,’’ said former Rams quarterback Jim Everett, watching from under a tent behind the end zones.

    As it grew hotter, it grew more amazing. The fans audibly gasped when rookie quarterback Jared Goff lost consecutive fumbles on bad snaps and let loose with a loud expletive. The fans then screeched after he threw an interception. When a couple of fans began derisively chanting his name — “Ja-red, Ja-red” — they suffered the indignant stares of the masses and quickly quieted.

    “This is unbelievable,’’ said former Rams offensive tackle Jackie Slater, also hanging out under a tent. “It’s unbelievable how much everything has changed.”

    At one point, so many fans were crowding the railing to get closer to the players, a security guard barked, “Move from the bench line and come back to your seats.”

    Nobody listened. They hung on the railing throughout the final drills, then crowded it after practice to roar at the departing players as if the padded, slick-faced behemoths were walking a red carpet at Hollywood and Highland.

    “To walk out here and see the stands like this, we are super blessed to be there,” said Rams punter Johnny Hekker. “Sometimes you put in hours and hours of work and there’s nobody there. Then you see something like this, we are so appreciative, we’re just soaking it all in.”

    This whole business about the Rams returning to Los Angeles just got real, so real that some early truths about these Rams have become immediately obvious.

    Even if they are as lousy as everyone thinks they will be, they are going to have a rollicking honeymoon here. Even more than wanting them to win, it seems fans are just thrilled to see them show up. This feeling could be stretched out with each wave of new fans that enters the Coliseum throughout the season. It was a feeling that dominated the stands Saturday on a basically dull sports afternoon that offered nothing more than newness.

    “You want to see the logo with L.A. on it, you want to see players wearing the L.A. uniform and competing, you just want it to sink in, that’s why many of us came here,” said Andre Jeanbart, another member of the Bring Back the Los Angeles Rams group and one of many fans who drove several hours to sit in 85-degree heat and watch guys play catch.

    Rams open training camp in Irvine
    Bill Plaschke, Gary Klein and Lindsey Thiry discuss Day 1 of Rams training camp in Irvine.
    The other truth is that even when the interest in the Rams begins to wane, which it surely will eventually do if the losing overwhelms the curiosity, the franchise will be carried by the power of the NFL.

    Much to the surprise of fans who have only ever watched USC or UCLA football practice, this wasn’t just a workout, it was an NFL production.

    There were tented attractions set up around the edges of the field, stands selling everything from shaved ice to kettle corn, giant bouncy houses for kids and a memorabilia shop for the die-hards. Fans could buy a hot dog for $4, bottled water for $2.50, and a Goff jersey for $149.99.

    The entire event, which will be repeated at 15 more open-to-the-public practices this summer — free admission with $10 parking — felt like a small-town company picnic surrounding gladiators engaged in this country’s most popular sport. Even though no outside food was allowed in the stands, guards relented to allow some old-school Rams fans to bring watermelons to wear on their heads.

    The NFL wasn’t like this when it left town, huh? What a difference a two-decade drought makes.

    “Looking seriously at this, comparing this to the 1990s, the NFL has grown leaps and bounds,” Everett said, glancing out to the fields. “This is what it is. You’re seeing the growth of the NFL right here, right in front of us today, this is how they roll.”

    And so a team that hasn’t made the playoffs in 12 seasons will roll into late summer underneath the sort of fire usually reserved for champions. It is their job to make it last.

    “We’ve got a lot of work to do, a long way to go with the football team, but the atmosphere is certainly going to help,” Coach Jeff Fisher said. “It will help them focus, help them to prepare. It’s different. It’s very good for them.”

    It’s real.

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