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AgamemnonParticipantAugust 20, 2016 at 7:03 pm in reply to: I am watching pass catchers tonight and backup center #51245
AgamemnonParticipantAugust 20, 2016 at 6:53 pm in reply to: Wagoner's replacement at ESPN sez Rams defense will take a step back this year #51243
AgamemnonParticipantI really only like 3 CBs on the outside. Tru, Gaines, and Roberson.
You don’t like Troy Hill? I like TH (so far).
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He had a good game last week, but I don’t think of him as starter material yet. I really think of him as bubble material at this time.
August 20, 2016 at 2:46 pm in reply to: I am watching pass catchers tonight and backup center #51222
AgamemnonParticipantTx, I keep a running copy. It is always a work in progress. This is the current edition.

http://s14.postimg.org/3mmj0xevl/screenshot_1227.png
You can use this link or in Firefox, right click and choose view image to see a full size pic.
Spruce is going to make the team. I haven’t decided who isn’t yet. Backup center is a question, too.
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This reply was modified 9 years, 6 months ago by
Agamemnon.
August 20, 2016 at 9:08 am in reply to: chat room tonight…you getting the game at 9 ET or 10 ET? #51187
AgamemnonParticipantAugust 20, 2016 at 9:07 am in reply to: Wagoner's replacement at ESPN sez Rams defense will take a step back this year #51185
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipantThey had to release Randolph to put him on IR without him taking a roster spot. He will still count againt the salary cap. It is a common practice. It is the same thing they did with Pasat. There is no reason for the author to read anything into it.
I think Fisher mentioned yesterday, that they were bringing him back.
AgamemnonParticipanthttp://www.ocregister.com/articles/higbee-726013-rams-goff.html
Tyler Higbee’s hard work at Rams camp is earning high praise
By RICH HAMMOND
2016-08-16 19:53:58IRVINE – Perhaps the most important praise, for the Rams and their rookie tight end Tyler Higbee, came from offensive coordinator Rob Boras, who ran across the field Tuesday to issue loud praise.
“Good job, Tyler!” Boras said of the jumbo rookie, who had made not a big catch, but a big block.
These are the moments the Rams are watching for, to see if Higbee suffers any dropoff in his practice habits. Thus far, the 6-foot-6, 250-pound receiver, dubbed “Little Baby Gronk” by teammate Todd Gurley – in tribute to NFL star Rob Gronkowski – hasn’t seemed too small for any moment in training camp.
“He’s handled the installation well,” Coach Jeff Fisher said. “We’re putting him in some situations that he wasn’t asked to do in college, and handling it very well. Every day is a learning experience, and he’s going to see some things in the run game and protections that he’s got to improve, but he’s just a mentally tough kid that is determined to succeed.”
The Rams, and those who watch them in preseason, quickly are learning that Higbee might be more than a serviceable tight end. He might be a major contributor to their offense, and soon.
Higbee has been sharing significant reps with incumbent tight end Lance Kendricks, who has been solid in his five seasons with the Rams, but Higbee is making the eye-popping plays.
Last season, as a senior at Western Kentucky, Higbee averaged 14.8 yards per catch, and eight of his 38 catches were for touchdowns.
Perhaps only his legal issues – Higbee was arrested in April and faces an assault charge in Ohio – kept Higbee from being drafted higher. The Rams took him in the fourth round and haven’t been disappointed.
In his first preseason game, last Saturday against Dallas, Higbee and quarterback Jared Goff connected three times (for 35 yards) and a second-quarter drive, and that’s probably no coincidence.
Goff and Higbee are training-camp roommates at UC Irvine, and the shared living space has allowed the two rookies to learn together off the field.
“I think it helps in terms of understanding the offense,” Higbee said. “After we have our meetings, we go back and kind of go over the script for the next day’s practice, or go over certain plays. It’s good hearing the quarterback, as far as what he looks for, and it helps me understand the offense.”
GOLDEN GIRL?
Rams defensive end Robert Quinn flew to Rio de Janeiro this week to watch his sister, Jasmine Camacho-Quinn, compete in the Olympics, in the 100-meter hurdles, for Puerto Rico. Robert and Jasmine’s mother, Maria, is a native of Puerto Rico.
Camacho-Quinn posted the third-best time in 100-meter heat races Tuesday and will be one of 24 athletes competing in Wednesday’s semifinals. The top eight then will race for medals Wednesday. In June, Camacho-Quinn, who attends Kentucky, won an NCAA championship in the 100 hurdles.
“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” said Fisher, who said he expected Quinn to be back for Saturday’s preseason game against Kansas City at the Coliseum. “It’s the right thing to do.”
INJURY UPDATE
The Rams were without two other defensive starters Tuesday: linebacker Mark Barron and safety Maurice Alexander. Both players watched practice from the field and Fisher gave no specifics about either and said, “They were just held out of practice today. Nothing big.”
Offensive lineman Rodger Saffold was a part-time participant in drills for a second consecutive day.
Fisher said he had “nothing to report” on starting right tackle Rob Havenstein, who has missed all of training camp with a foot injury.
E.J. Gaines, in contention for a starting job at cornerback, returned from a hamstring injury and took some first-team reps opposite Trumaine Johnson.
GOFF UPDATE
Goff got a few reps with the first-team offense near the end of Tuesday’s practice, and Fisher gave no indication how much Goff will play against the Chiefs on Saturday. Fisher previously said Goff “quite likely” would get first-team reps in that game.
Goff had something of a rough practice Tuesday, when – during work with the second team – he threw an interception, fumbled one snap and later stumbled while dropping back.
RAM REMAKE?
Backup offensive lineman Eric Kush, quickly becoming known as one of the funniest of the Rams, recently indicated on social media that he wanted to do a remake of “Ram It,’’ the rap song and video performed by some members of the 1985 Rams.
Was Kush serious? He said he hasn’t brought up the idea to teammates yet.
“I’m definitely not opposed to doing it,” Kush said. “I have a feeling some people might want to do it. I think it would be a good time.”
AgamemnonParticipantVinny Bonsignore and Jack Wang recap the Rams’ latest day of training camp, talking about the development of rookie QB Jared Goff as well as potential contract extensions for head coach Jeff Fisher and GM Les Snead.
AgamemnonParticipantWell yeah I see that some schedules (including the Rams official site) have it at 9 PM ET. So maybe there is an hour delay? When I went to set it up for tivo it was a normal 3 hour game on at 10 PM ET.
My guide showed 9:00 – 11:00. But maybe, it is a taped delay?
AgamemnonParticipantThe NFL Channel is joined in broadcast, I think.
Or, taped delay. 😉
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This reply was modified 9 years, 7 months ago by
Agamemnon.
AgamemnonParticipantI give Fisher a C+. It is hard to grade Snead, cause he isn’t in charge. He is an A at trades, but overall, I have to guess and say a B. The Rams have had some hits, but too many misses and trading up into the top of the first round doesn’t work for me. Demoff used to be an A, but he is on sabbatical now. His protege is a C. Why can’t we extend anyone early. I take that back. We extended Foles. 😉
Algebra was used in this post. Fisher is a 5.0 and Snead is a 7.0. Devaney was a 5.0.
5.0 isn’t necessarily bad, but I grade according to the class of the people they are in. The best football people are in the NFL. So, while it isn’t bad, it isn’t any better than average compared to the competition.
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This reply was modified 9 years, 7 months ago by
Agamemnon.
AgamemnonParticipantE.J. Gaines (hamstring) was cleared to practice at full speed today. Will play vs Chiefs on Saturday barring a setback.
— Jack Wang (@thejackwang) August 16, 2016
After getting hurt with backup linemen, Rams’ Goff likely to play with “ones” next Saturday: https://t.co/m3tc8PeZoz
— Rich Hammond (@Rich_Hammond) August 15, 2016
AgamemnonParticipant8/20/16
10:00 PM ET
NFL PRESEASON GAME LIVE
“NFL Preseason Game” – Preseason Week 2: Kansas City Chiefs vs. Los Angeles RamsI read somewhere that the NFL channel is a joined in broadcast thing. Notice the start time is later there than the actual start time.
AgamemnonParticipantsteelersdepot.com
2016 NFL Draft Player Profiles: Wisconsin S Michael Caputo – Steelers Depot
By Luc Polglazelink: http://www.steelersdepot.com/2016/02/2016-nfl-draft-player-profiles-wisconsin-s-michael-caputo/
As we delve into the Pittsburgh Steelers offseason, our attention has now shifted to the 2016 NFL Draft as it relates to the prospects. From now until the draft takes place, we hope to profile as many draft prospects as we possibly can for you. Most of these player profiles will be centered around prospects the Steelers are likely to have interest in.
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A breakdown of Wisconsin safety Michael Caputo#7 – Michael Caputo/S Wisconsin: 6-1, 206
The Good
– Has played box, slot, C2 high, upman against stacks, boundary corner
– Good enough vision to track H-back running flat opposite route behind OL
– Not afraid to come in and get his nose dirty
– Good click and close, short area speed
– Comes up strongly, plays like a bull across the middle
– Hips look like cornerback hips in coverage
– Great speed in open field
– Excellent vision and play recognition
– Has the deep speed to at least stay reasonably in step on WRs in coverage – won’t get burned, at least
The Bad
– Tends to drop his head and lunge blindly when tackling
– Takes a moment to re-start from a dead stop
– Jogs plays from the backside at times
– Overpursues outside on angles from FS against run
– Hips look stiff against the run in crowded spaces
– Throws shoulder at times tackling, tackles ankles at others. Inconsistent
– Gets bodied by WRs by not setting his feet
Bio
– 40 starts at Wisconsin
– Junior year of high school, played two ways at RB and LB. Had 360 carries for 2,611 yards and 34 TDs, added 89.5 tackles on defense
– Rushed 5 times for 40 yards and 2 TDs in first quarter of first game of senior year before suffering season-ending injury
– Pittsburgh-area native
– Special Olympics basketball coach and JROTC Marine
– 2014 Second-Team All-America (FWAA)
– His 106 tackles in 2014 were 9th in the Big 10Tape Breakdown
Just before the snap, Caputo sneaks down into the box from deep to play strong safety. He immediately controls his hips and plays the run. Notice how he doesn’t flip his body to run the play down head-on. Instead, he half-shuffles with his hips mostly parallel to the line of scrimmage. This is really quite polished technique for a safety that helps to eliminate counter/misdirection runs biting a defense and is very noteworthy.
Also impressive is Caputo keeping his eyes on the ballcarrier the whole time. He keeps himself clean in the wash and upright while trying to get to the running back the whole time.
Here, Caputo is aligned as the playside free safety at the hashmarks at the 40 yard line. It looks like he’s coming up to an underneath zone anyway, but take note of his vision again. He slips a block by #17 WR Jacob Hillyer and closes quickly through the wash. He has a really ugly ankle tackle attempt on Jordan Canzeri, but his instincts and play recognition to get him there are excellent.
Another bad tackle attempt for Caputo, who doesn’t enter the screen until the runner gets to the second screen. He again drops his vision and attempts an ankle tackle on FB Andy Janovich. This is a bad habit an NFL coach will have to invest some time in fixing, but it was key here. On a 3rd and 2, he allows the fullback to easily break a poor tackle for a go-ahead score. As the free safety here, he has to be responsible for keeping the defensive backfield protected and make the tackle.
Caputo comes into the box again pre-snap. His responsibility is the FB in the flat. As soon as he recognizes that’s the target of the play on this 3rd and 2, he sells out and charges downfield. Ultimately, he drops his head (sound familiar?) but does a great job driving through the player to hold the line and keep him short of the first down.
I also really like the edge that Caputo brings. If you want a guy who plays through the whistle, you’ve got one right here. He’s not afraid of getting scrappy in the pile to ensure a stop is made. This is the kind of attitude that coaches and scouts love to see on tape, because it comes across in the way players hold themselves on the field.
Although Caputo (wearing #42 here) doesn’t normally flash his play recognition skills in the passing game, he does on this snap from the East/West Shrine Game. He reads the QB’s eyes (college teammate Joel Stave) and breaks to the ball. Great play by Caputo.
Summary:I was at the 2016 East/West Shrine Game just a few weeks ago. It was there that this young safety from Wisconsin caught my eye. Although I was familiar with the name going into the game, I hadn’t had a chance to study him as a prospect. I only knew him as the guy who had an awful concussion against Alabama that caused him to attempt to line up on the wrong side of the ball
. After a dominant defensive performance including two interceptions and a Defensive Player of the Game nod, I knew I had to do some digging on Caputo.
If my calculations are correct (since updated figures have not yet been provided), Caputo started 40 games in his career at Wisconsin. That much college starting experience is rare, and it shows in the way Caputo plays the game. His play diagnosing is quick and accurate. He knows where he needs to be, and his angles are usually excellent.
Caputo is always around the ball, evidenced by his 171 tackles (100 solo) over the last two seasons: an impressive quality in a safety. However, his tackling technique is extremely limited at times. There are players who dive for ankle tackles, and then there are players who drop their heads (thus being unable to see what they’re aiming at) and dive for ankle tackles. Caputo is the latter. In open field one-on-one attempting to stop a ball carrier, he is a technical mess. But give him a force responsibility or a crowded box, and he works his way to the ball carrier with veteran savvy.
Although he wasn’t often asked to play deep in college, he has flashed potential of maturing into that role in the NFL. However, he fits far better as a strong safety. His physicality and hip discipline are reminiscent of linebacker qualities, but far more intriguing was his use underneath at Wisconsin. The Badgers usually had converted quarterback Tanner McEvoy roaming the deep field (an intriguing pro prospect himself at 6-6 and 231 with athletic ability and range) with Caputo playing the box. From there, Caputo was used everywhere from LB to slot corner to boundary, including covering receivers such as Geronimo Allison of Illinois, who jumped out at the Shrine Game. The fact that Caputo’s coverage was trusted to match up with those players means good things for his pro development.
I see Caputo as being a very good matchup coverage safety and spot starter at strong safety to begin, but who I think can develop into a fine SS. I don’t think he has the range to succeed long-term at free safety, nor the athleticism to make a big impact in the league, but could carve out a niche at strong safety. He’s a smart player with translatable physical skills, if not the athletic traits to match.
Projection: Fourth Round
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipantI thought the offensive line played fine, but it was against the cowgirls. We will know more when they play KC, Den, and Minn. Kush looks like our backup center. imo
They need Gaines at CB or Safety. I always liked him at Safety.
Mannion did well at everything, except hit the ‘center of the target’. I think he can do that, but he needs more reps with the receivers and he probably won’t get that under Fisher. Keenum and Goff are written in stone there.
Didn’t notice Hemmingway. Maybe he ends up on the Practice Squad? I would make Quick a TE. 😉
Couples should be a DT. Seau isn’t as good as he looked. imo
Sims looked slow. Thomas is a BIG man.
AgamemnonParticipanthttp://www.therams.com/videos/videos/Jeff-Fisher-Press-Conference—814/e3638679-ac37-4ee2-b8bf-dd0ae4aacb45
Posted: 1 hour ago
Jeff Fisher Press Conference – 8/14
During Sunday’s head coach press conference, Jeff Fisher updated on a key Rams injuries and reviewed rookie QB Jared Goff’s performance.
AgamemnonParticipanthttp://www.therams.com/videos/videos/Jeff-Fisher-Postgame-Press-Conference—813/04d09c4f-579c-48f7-8a43-8d4f52f2be64
Jeff Fisher Postgame Press Conference – 8/13
Head coach Jeff Fisher breaks down the Rams first preseason game.
A longer version of Fisher’s interview.http://www.therams.com/videos/videos/Case-Keenum-Postgame-Press-Conference—813/24a68803-1a18-4032-ae8c-b451942e330b
Case Keenum Postgame Press Conference – 8/13
Quarterback Case Keenum recaps the team’s first preseason game and the atmosphere in the Coliseum.http://www.therams.com/videos/videos/Jared-Goff-Postgame-Press-Conference—813/afb24c62-5a9a-4403-8eb6-f40f351a64a4
Jared Goff Postgame Press Conference – 8/13
Quarterback Jared Goff answers questions about his first NFL preseason game.
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipantPreseason Week 1: Cowboys vs. Rams highlights
(00:04:25:00) Posted 28 minutes agoThe Rams defeat the Dallas Cowboys, 28-24, in their return to Los Angeles in Week 1 of the 2016 preseason.
AgamemnonParticipantJeff Fisher recaps Rams’ victory
Rams head coach Jeff Fisher discusses the team’s first win in its return to Los Angeles during Week 1 of the 2016 NFL Preseason.
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipantJust like Fisher, I don’t want to go 10 and 6. I hope that shows tonight. What part of ‘don’t drop the ball’ didn’t you understand? We have rules and I am going to uphold those rules. Get a free ticket to CUT CITY. Stay with your buddy in Gbay.
Goff should be ready for chants of ‘sun rises in the east’ by Dallas defense. Isn’t that a question on the wonderlic test?
AgamemnonParticipantMike Singletary has seen some talented defensive players in his day. So when he says Aaron Donald stands out, that really means something.
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a kid like 99. I’ve never seen a kid like that.”
This is the correct version. He says kid. Check it out here, if you are not worried about malware. http://www.thedaretelly.com/hard-knocks/season/11/episode/1 at the 27:15 mark.
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipant
AgamemnonParticipanthttps://www.facebook.com/ocrrams/videos/318156941862128/
OC Register: Los Angeles Rams was live.
1 hr ·After the Rams’ latest day at training camp, Ryan Kartje and Jack Wang talk about Jared Goff running with the first-team offense, as well as some potential breakout stars on HBO’s “Hard Knocks.”
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This reply was modified 9 years, 6 months ago by
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