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InvaderRamModeratormy perception from Warner in recent seasons is that he feels more connected to the Cardinals than he does with the Rams.
i don’t think he was too happy about the way he left the rams.
if he ever does get to the hall of fame, i bet he goes in as a cardinal.
InvaderRamModerator<div class=”d4p-bbt-quote-title”>InvaderRam wrote:</div>
in this instance. they can control the flow of information. the only people who would actually have to be in the know is kroenke, goodell, and some select owners with influence. and no physical evidence to speak of and all just people talking.i mean the only reason we know kroenke is building a stadium is because he released the information. and all this talk about meetings with the inglewood mayor are just hearsay.
ok. i’m being stupid and suspicious.
First of all, I’m not sure specifically what “in the know” means. If that means “knows that the fix is in for moving,” then that just isn’t true. The NFL has rules for relocation that have been established by the owners. They made those rules so that the interests of the NFL as a whole can be protected, and so that relocation can be fully vetted, and all concerns considered. The proposals are carefully considered by the Finance Committee. They consider the proposal, look deeply at the financing, and look at what it means in terms of competitive balance, potential re-alignment, and, of course, cash flow. In this case, they will do a full analysis of the St. Louis proposal as well. Every single team is a billion dollar corporation with a slew of smart guys in suits who will look very carefully at what a relocation means to THEM, and their bottom line. (And, btw, I agree with something zn said early in the thread; I don’t think a move to LA benefits the league much. Not financially anyway. Mostly it provides a glamour site in a glamour town and a nice place for Super Bowls, but that’s it. It doesn’t increase revenue for the other 31 teams in any significant way).
This isn’t something that can just breezily be passed through without anyone much noticing. Stan needs votes from 24 teams. There’s a VOTE. The owners don’t just wake up in the morning, snap open their papers, and find out that an NFL team has moved. The more I think about, the more amazed I am that I even gave a moment’s consideration to the possibility that “the fix is in.” It can’t be. Stan’s proposal was just released the other day, and we haven’t seen the Peacock proposal. Even if you assume that the NFL people have been kept in the pipeline on developments of each of these proposals, and already have a good idea what they look like, the close examination and hard questions have not been begun – unless you think 32 owners have already studied this, argued about, voted on it, and just decided not to tell anybody publicly because they prefer to play charades to no advantage whatsoever.
Nope. I am starting to think there is no choice but to believe our eyes here. Kroenke really did that. Now, he may have let the other owners know in advance he was going to do that. But that still isn’t a fix even if he did. And maybe he didn’t. Maybe it was a surprise. We don’t know yet.
But I still don’t think this is brash, impulsive behavior. I’m convinced Kroenke is not going Rambo here. He’s going Bobby Fischer. He’s playing chess, imo, even if it looks like wild west cowboy behavior. He released his plan deliberately, and timed it with purpose.
I think he released his plan when he did because now the Peacock proposal will be compared to his proposal. Had Peacock’s proposal come out first, most people would be looking at its virtues. “Nice new stadium, wow, isn’t that pretty? Some commercial development…my, what a concept. Good deal. That could work!”
If Kroenke’s proposal followed that, it would just look like an attempt to One-Up a solid plan. A few more seats, a few more retail spaces, whatever.
Coming out after Kroenke’s proposal, Peacock’s is likely to be examined for its shortcomings in comparison to his. It will be considered a weaker version. Its unveiling is more likely to disappoint. Especially if it involves public money.
That’s my guess.
I’m looking forward to Friday.
<div class=”d4p-bbt-quote-title”>InvaderRam wrote:</div>
in this instance. they can control the flow of information. the only people who would actually have to be in the know is kroenke, goodell, and some select owners with influence. and no physical evidence to speak of and all just people talking.i mean the only reason we know kroenke is building a stadium is because he released the information. and all this talk about meetings with the inglewood mayor are just hearsay.
ok. i’m being stupid and suspicious.
First of all, I’m not sure specifically what “in the know” means. If that means “knows that the fix is in for moving,” then that just isn’t true. The NFL has rules for relocation that have been established by the owners. They made those rules so that the interests of the NFL as a whole can be protected, and so that relocation can be fully vetted, and all concerns considered. The proposals are carefully considered by the Finance Committee. They consider the proposal, look deeply at the financing, and look at what it means in terms of competitive balance, potential re-alignment, and, of course, cash flow. In this case, they will do a full analysis of the St. Louis proposal as well. Every single team is a billion dollar corporation with a slew of smart guys in suits who will look very carefully at what a relocation means to THEM, and their bottom line. (And, btw, I agree with something zn said early in the thread; I don’t think a move to LA benefits the league much. Not financially anyway. Mostly it provides a glamour site in a glamour town and a nice place for Super Bowls, but that’s it. It doesn’t increase revenue for the other 31 teams in any significant way).
This isn’t something that can just breezily be passed through without anyone much noticing. Stan needs votes from 24 teams. There’s a VOTE. The owners don’t just wake up in the morning, snap open their papers, and find out that an NFL team has moved. The more I think about, the more amazed I am that I even gave a moment’s consideration to the possibility that “the fix is in.” It can’t be. Stan’s proposal was just released the other day, and we haven’t seen the Peacock proposal. Even if you assume that the NFL people have been kept in the pipeline on developments of each of these proposals, and already have a good idea what they look like, the close examination and hard questions have not been begun – unless you think 32 owners have already studied this, argued about, voted on it, and just decided not to tell anybody publicly because they prefer to play charades to no advantage whatsoever.
Nope. I am starting to think there is no choice but to believe our eyes here. Kroenke really did that. Now, he may have let the other owners know in advance he was going to do that. But that still isn’t a fix even if he did. And maybe he didn’t. Maybe it was a surprise. We don’t know yet.
But I still don’t think this is brash, impulsive behavior. I’m convinced Kroenke is not going Rambo here. He’s going Bobby Fischer. He’s playing chess, imo, even if it looks like wild west cowboy behavior. He released his plan deliberately, and timed it with purpose.
I think he released his plan when he did because now the Peacock proposal will be compared to his proposal. Had Peacock’s proposal come out first, most people would be looking at its virtues. “Nice new stadium, wow, isn’t that pretty? Some commercial development…my, what a concept. Good deal. That could work!”
If Kroenke’s proposal followed that, it would just look like an attempt to One-Up a solid plan. A few more seats, a few more retail spaces, whatever.
Coming out after Kroenke’s proposal, Peacock’s is likely to be examined for its shortcomings in comparison to his. It will be considered a weaker version. Its unveiling is more likely to disappoint. Especially if it involves public money.
That’s my guess.
I’m looking forward to Friday.
i think you make a lot of sense. i’m just being stupid really. but yeah. what you say makes a lot of sense.
InvaderRamModeratorOklahoma co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Josh Heupel has been let go, according to a source.
A formal announcement is expected by Sooners coach Bob Stoops during a press conference later Tuesday morning. The move marks the end of one of the most successful offensive periods for the Sooners.
The 36-year-old has been Oklahoma’s play-caller since 2011 when he was promoted from quarterbacks coach.
http://www.si.com/college-football/2015/01/06/josh-heupel-oklahoma-sooners-co-offensive-coordinator
Heupel became the quarterbacks coach for Oklahoma in 2005; among his notable accomplishments in that capacity was coaching Sooner quarterback Sam Bradford, who won the 2008 Heisman Trophy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josh_Heupel
<span class=”d4pbbc-font-color” style=”color: blue”>This is a guy that Bradford trusts. He might be on the Rams staff next year.</span>
interesting. possibly as oc or qb coach?
January 8, 2015 at 12:33 am in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15830
InvaderRamModeratorhe wanted to move south.
not west.
hahahaha!
sorry. i just had to say that.
InvaderRamModeratori thought this bit was interesting.
“The NFL can make money in St. Louis,” Rainford said. “It may end up being the Rams with this owner, the Rams with a different owner, a different team with a different owner.”
the rams with a different owner? hmmm…
InvaderRamModeratorok. one other thing. does st. louis even want to play with an owner who clearly does not want to stay there?
other owners have threatened to move but always seemed to make an attempt at working out things with the city.
but absolutely nothing from stan. the article below is stuff we’ve already known about. but in other cases where the team ended up staying. were communication lines this broken?
http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/12133304/city-leaders-say-st-louis-rams-owner-return-our-calls
St. Louis mayor: We’re getting hint
ST. LOUIS — City officials said Wednesday that the owner of the Rams isn’t returning their calls, so they plan to work directly with the NFL on efforts to keep a team — any team — in St. Louis amid speculation the Rams are headed back to Los Angeles.
Rams billionaire owner Stan Kroenke is part of a joint venture that announced plans Monday for an 80,000-seat stadium in the Los Angeles suburbs, a move that could soon return the NFL to the nation’s second-largest market and the home of the Rams from 1946 until they moved to St. Louis in 1995. The move would have to wait at least a year; the NFL has said no team moves would be allowed in 2015.
Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon isn’t giving up on the Rams.
“St. Louis is an NFL city,” Nixon said Wednesday. “I don’t think it’s too late to keep the Rams.”
But city leaders are hedging their bets, saying the plan now is to work directly with the NFL, not the Rams. The change in philosophy is due in part to the fact that Kroenke won’t take calls from Mayor Francis Slay or other city leaders, said Maggie Crane, Slay’s spokeswoman.
“He hasn’t responded, he hasn’t called back, he hasn’t done anything,” Crane said of Kroenke.
“After a while, you sort of get the hint,” said Jeff Rainford, the mayor’s chief of staff.
Messages left Wednesday at Kroenke’s office were not returned. A Rams spokesman declined comment.
“The NFL can make money in St. Louis,” Rainford said. “It may end up being the Rams with this owner, the Rams with a different owner, a different team with a different owner.”
Rainford said St. Louis can make a compelling argument to remain an NFL city: It is the nation’s 20th-largest market, with a loyal fan base that sold out every game at the Edward Jones Dome from the team’s arrival until a long run of bad play — the Rams haven’t had a winning record since 2003.
If the Rams leave, it isn’t clear which team St. Louis might pursue.
The Oakland Raiders and San Diego Chargers also have been reported as teams that could move to Los Angeles.
The Raiders’ lease to play at O.co Coliseum, formerly known as the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, has expired, and the team is now on a year-to-year agreement. The Chargers can announce their intention to leave San Diego between Feb. 1 and May 1 of each year through 2020 if they pay an early-termination fee tied to the bonds used to expand Qualcomm Stadium in 1997.
St. Louis has been through this before. The Chicago Cardinals moved here in 1960 and stayed until 1987. Unhappy with sharing Busch Stadium with the baseball Cardinals, owner Bill Bidwill moved the team to Arizona.
By the early 1990s, a domed stadium was being built with taxpayer money. St. Louis missed out on an expansion team in 1993 when the league awarded franchises to Jacksonville and Carolina. But in 1995, Rams owner Georgia Frontiere took the Rams back to her hometown. Kroenke bought in as minority owner.
Frontiere died, and in 2010, Kroenke bought the team. Meanwhile, the dome — small and outdated by NFL standards — became a point of contention. Negotiations about improvements have gone nowhere.
With the threat of the Rams’ departure looming, Nixon in November appointed former Anheuser-Busch executive David Peacock and veteran attorney Robert Blitz to spearhead an effort looking at a new stadium. They are expected to deliver a report to Nixon by Friday. One plan would call for a new stadium near the Mississippi River not far from the Gateway Arch.
Paying for it is the next hurdle.
The dome was built 20 years ago with 30-year bonds. The state of Missouri pays $12 million annually toward the debt; the city and St. Louis County pay $6 million each.
There appears to be no appetite for new public funding. Missouri Senate Majority Leader Ron Richard, a Republican, said it was doubtful that lawmakers would approve new spending for a football team when the state has so many other needs.
Nixon and Rainford said no new taxes or fees would be used for the new stadium, but Nixon has hinted that the bonds for the dome could be extended.
Anheuser-Busch is one of the NFL’s largest advertisers, and Peacock worked directly with the league on advertising and marketing while with the brewing giant. He is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame advisory board. Blitz was part of the legal team that helped bring the Rams to St. Louis and is legal counsel to the St. Louis Regional Convention and Sports Complex Authority.
ESPN.com’s Arash Markazi and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
InvaderRamModeratori do have to say in the ray rice situation. there was actual physical evidence which could not be ignored and which they did not have any control over. that was the one variable they couldn’t account for. otherwise it remains a secret.
in this instance. they can control the flow of information. the only people who would actually have to be in the know is kroenke, goodell, and some select owners with influence. and no physical evidence to speak of and all just people talking.
i mean the only reason we know kroenke is building a stadium is because he released the information. and all this talk about meetings with the inglewood mayor are just hearsay.
ok. i’m being stupid and suspicious.
January 7, 2015 at 11:26 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15819
InvaderRamModeratorWell a lot of learning a new offense is sitting down and reading.
And, coming back from surgery, he is going to have to re-tool his mechanics anyway, that is, rep and re-acquire them. Might as well learn a new version.
Flacco was drafted 2 years before Bradford. It’s not like Flacco is ancient.
I do not see this as a big impediment. Honest, I really don’t.
i would have to disagree. i know where this is going. we’ll just have to agree to disagree.
but. while flacco only has 2 years on bradford. he’s got twice as many games. he spent the majority of his career with the same coordinator while also not suffering 2 major injuries. well. 3 if you count his last year at oklahoma. that’s not even including the ankle injury which caused him to miss games.
i just don’t think flacco or manning’s 2014 season come close to the challenges bradford is having to overcome in 2015.
i also don’t see an oc coming in from the outside having any reason to try and build an offense with a qb who can’t stay healthy and doesn’t know his system. i mean he has fisher on his side. so he has that going for him. although who knows now that schotty is gone. maybe a lot of that was contingent on schotty coming back and bradford being in the system for 3 years.
i also realize i’m being overly-negative right now, so i should just stop right here.
January 7, 2015 at 11:04 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15816
InvaderRamModeratori don’t know. i don’t know that you can compare bradford who is facing a huge uphill climb just to be able to play to two quarterbacks with superbowl experience. i mean flacco and manning have both enjoyed tremendous success.
i don’t know if bradford is at the same point manning and flacco were at last year. maybe it can happen. i really doubt it. but anything is possible.
joe flacco – 96 games through 2013. cam cameron his oc from 2008-2012. then caldwell from 2012-2013 before switching. (caldwell and cameron shared duties in 2012.)
eli manning – 153 games through 2013. worked with kevin gilbride as qb coach or oc for ten years before 2014.
sam bradford – 49 games so far. didn’t even play last year. 3 different coordinators.i just don’t see it as any sort of recipe for success. this really hurts bradford’s chances next year. especially if they pick someone bradford isn’t familiar with. so he’s going to learn a new offense while also trying to rehab from major reconstructive surgery. which flacco and manning didn’t have to wrestle with as they made the transition.
January 7, 2015 at 10:28 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15811
InvaderRamModeratorhere’s some stuff on cignetti. i like this hire cuz he’s worked with sam (and i’m assuming bradford is still very much in their plans). he was his quarterbacks coach, and he runs a ball control offense which falls in line with fisher’s philosophy. he’s also been a coordinator although at the college level.
interesting note. he worked alongside mike mccarthy when they were both at pittsburgh.
http://www.turfshowtimes.com/2012/2/7/2782957/st-louis-rams-quarterbacks-coach-frank-cignetti
http://www.nj.com/rutgersfootball/index.ssf/2011/08/politi_rutgers_frank_cignetti.html
January 7, 2015 at 10:20 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15810
InvaderRamModeratori wonder if fisher made his comments on bradford before schotty decided to leave or if he made them knowing schotty was going to leave.
here’s some stuff on boras.
Coaching career
Boras started his coaching career at his alma mater, DePauw University, as the offensive line coach. He then moved on to the University of Texas where he served in various positions over four years. After further stints at Benedictine University and UNLV, Boras became the tight ends coach for the Chicago Bears in February 2004. Boras was relieved of his duties with the Chicago Bears in January 2010 along with five other offensive coaches.In February of 2010, Boras was hired by the Jacksonville Jaguars to succeed newly hired Chicago Bears’ offensive line coach Mike Tice as tight ends coach.
how about frank cignetti? he’s had offensive coordinator experience. just wondering if continuity is the way to go. someone who has intimate knowledge of the personnel. their strengths and weaknesses.
or maybe they bring in someone new. inject a different energy into this group. sometimes it helps.
January 7, 2015 at 9:59 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15807
InvaderRamModeratorwhatever the reason this kind of sucks.
this puts bradford’s situation more in limbo. part of the appeal of bringing him back was sam having experience in this offense. now everyone is starting over again. i hope they promote someone from within? are there any internal candidates for the job. if they bring in someone new are they that more likely to just get a new qb? this must make bradford’s future more cloudy.
InvaderRamModeratorYeah, I don’t think so.
They couldn’t keep the Ray Rice video a secret, and that involved only the league office and one football ownership.
This gambit would involve all 32 ownerships and the league office. That’s hundreds and hundreds of employees.
Meanwhile there is ample reason to believe that there are people in the league who oppose the move. That means there is no way there CAN be a hidden approval. Who would approve it? Goodell? You think Goodell would be telling Stan to just go ahead without going through the proper committees for approval? There is no way in the world. That would lead to a bloodbath in the league, and Goodell would be the first person executed. There is no “fix” in. And not much motive to have a “fix.”
you make a lot of good points.
i guess we’re all in the dark. it’s a game of thrones, man. a game of thrones.
you’re probably right though. wonder what peacock has up his sleave…
InvaderRamModeratorinteresting. thomas davis tore his acl 3 times in 3 years. from 2009-2011. he’s played alright since then.
there’s hope…
January 7, 2015 at 7:15 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15780
InvaderRamModeratorhmmm… interesting. i dunno. would schotty know either way if a move is happening???
maybe he does want the college head coaching gig eventually. maybe he doesn’t like the grind of a pro football season.
more importantly. what does this mean for sam bradford???
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This reply was modified 11 years, 5 months ago by
InvaderRam.
January 7, 2015 at 6:52 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15777
InvaderRamModeratoror maybe there’s something wrong with the wide receivers coach? i don’t know.
or maybe bradford was injured, and they had to get by with spare pieces.
or maybe schotty is holding them back.
or maybe the oline was in tatters. as per usual.
or maybe they’re young and still developing.
or maybe they’re just not good enough.
or maybe it’s all of those things.
i just hope that.
1. they have a healthy starting qb next year.
2. they get a competent oc.
3. they get a revamped and healthy oline.
4. they continue to get better.
5. they are as good as the rams think they are.
InvaderRamModeratori don’t think it’s time to shut the thread down.
it’s a very sensitive issue. for some people it just hurts. especially for those st. louis fans who lost the cardinals.
i mean look at the dodgers moving to la. they’ve written songs about it.
just like los angelenos who lost the rams to st. louis now st louisans are going through the same thing. again. so i think we’re in a unique situation where both sides understand what it is to lose a team like that.
i urge all of us to just take a step back and realize that. be sympathetic to one another.
InvaderRamModeratoryes way more distractions.
you’re getting way too touchy. i’m actually kind of in support of the rams moving back. for selfish reasons.
and rams would keep their name. it’s way too good of a story not to. rams return home… blah blah blah.
InvaderRamModeratorlos angeles by itself would be full of distractions for young athletic millionaires.
i think they should just tour the united states and move every year to a different city.
LOST – Ben Linus moves island & transports to Tun…: http://youtu.be/uWADvvG71SU
January 7, 2015 at 4:42 pm in reply to: Reports out of Georgia that Schottenheimer is the new offensive coordinator #15757
InvaderRamModeratorwell. we’ll see. if the offense magically transforms next year and austin goes to the pro bowl it might tell us something.
it might. or it might not.
InvaderRamModeratorthe league knows and approves. i’m sure of it. they’ve known this for awhile. wouldn’t be the first shady thing they’ve done.
i bet even peacock knows while getting assurances that st louis will get a team in the future. maybe jacksonville.
InvaderRamModeratorme personally. i would have to root for the rams although i’d have an eye on that defense. i love the defense that snead and fisher have put together. but yeah. i’d eventually stop following them as players left.
but also. the selfish part of me would like to see them in la. but not at the expense of losing the local guys on this board. i think i’d rather they stay in st. louis in that case.
i also don’t think there is any sort of expansion team. any “new” team in los angeles or st. louis will have to come from some other city. i actually think the trade and move might be very possible.
or maybe they do something totally crazy. kroenke trades the rams to khan who then trades the jags to bowlen while kroenke gets the broncos. and bowlen moves to los angeles with the jaguars. thus solving several problems all at once… i’m calling it right now.
InvaderRamModeratorit’d be pretty funny if kroenke and khan traded teams, and the jaguars moved to los angeles.
ha ha ha ha!
i mean it has happened before.
InvaderRamModeratorhttp://www.rams-news.com/bernie-i-dont-want-to-cover-this-team-next-year-audio/
Bernie: “I dont want to cover this team next year…”
…
sweet!
InvaderRamModeratorsomething about this makes me believe this is actually going to happen. and i don’t think the nfl is being completely honest about this. my bet is they want this to happen.
http://espn.go.com/los-angeles/nfl/story/_/id/12125028/project-nfl-stadium-los-angeles-going-forward
L.A. stadium plans ‘going forward’
Updated: January 5, 2015, 6:05 PM ET
By Arash Markazi | ESPN.comLOS ANGELES — The St. Louis Rams could be headed back to Los Angeles as early as 2016.
A year after purchasing 60 acres of land in Inglewood adjacent to the Forum and Hollywood Park, Rams owner Stan Kroenke has teamed up with the owners of the Hollywood Park site to build an NFL stadium, the Hollywood Park Land Company announced Monday.
Stockbridge Capital Group, which owns the 298-acre Hollywood Park site, already had plans for a mixed-use community on the land that formerly housed the famed thoroughbred racing track, which closed in late 2013.
Signature gathering will begin soon for an initiative that would place the “City of Champions Revitalization Project” on the Inglewood municipal ballot in 2015. if it passes, construction on the project would begin by the end of the year.
“This project is going forward,” Inglewood mayor James T. Butts Jr. said at a news conference in front of Inglewood City Hall on Monday. “We’re thrilled in the City of Inglewood. Here we are in in the position to build that field of dreams and hope that they’ll come.”
Butts said he spoke to Kroenke about the project over the weekend but would not comment on any conversations with the NFL.
As described in the ballot measure, the project will include a stadium of up to 80,000 seats and a performance venue of up to 6,000 seats while reconfiguring the previously approved Hollywood Park plan for up to 890,000 square feet of retail, 780,000 square feet of office space, 2,500 new residential units, a 300-room hotel and 25 acres of public parks, playgrounds, open space and pedestrian and bicycle access.
At a separate news conference at the Hollywood Park site, Chris Meany, senior vice president of Hollywood Park Land Company, said they were committed to beginning construction on the stadium with or without a commitment from an NFL team. The declaration, not to mention the involvement of a current NFL owner, sets it apart from other “shovel-ready” stadium proposals that have always first required a team committing to playing there before construction could begin.
“I’ve heard that there’s a lot of talk about a lot of sites that have been out there for a very long time, for years and years and years,” Meany said. “I don’t see shovels in the ground on those projects. We’re putting our shovels in the ground and going forward. This is the location in Los Angeles that for decades was the best location for sports and entertainment.”
The stadium authorized by the ballot measure will be designed by HKS Inc., one of the world’s leading firms for the design of sports and entertainment complexes. A successful ballot measure would shorten the time frame for Inglewood’s approval of a stadium and would mean that professional sports could return to Inglewood by 2018.
Many proposed stadium plans have come and gone in the hopes of bringing the NFL back to Los Angeles after the city lost both the Raiders and Rams after the 1994 season, but none of those plans were ever backed by a current NFL owner capable of moving his team into the country’s second-largest market.
The 80,000-seat stadium would be designed to house multiple teams and would be covered but open from the sides and be able to not only hold football and soccer games but also be in the running to bid on events such as the Final Four and major prizefights. It would also conceivably be part of Los Angeles’ bid to host the 2024 Olympics and possible future bids for the World Cup.
“We’re going to have the most important, good-looking, best, state-of-the-art sports venue in the western United States, if not the world, and we’ll be ready when people want to use it,” Meany said. “We hope to attract more than our fair [share] of large-scale events here. I can’t speak for what the NCAA would do, but we have designed a building that would be perfect to house the Final Four. … We have not had any talk with the Olympic organizing committee, but we think we’ll have a venue that will enhance Los Angeles’ opportunities.”
Meany and Butts were careful not to call the stadium an “NFL stadium” or claim that it was being built to house an NFL team, but it was clear that was the underlying expectation as a handful of Rams fans cheered from a distance during both news conferences.
“When the Lakers and Kings left [Inglewood], they left for what was a better offer,” Butts said. “We’re not trying to take anybody’s team. These are businesspeople. They make business decisions. But if the best, newest stadium in the world is in Inglewood, I’d imagine that someone would be interested.”
The Rams are expected to convert their lease at St. Louis’ Edward Jones Dome to a year-to-year agreement later this month, and if the team and the city fail to come to an agreement to build a new stadium, the Rams could move back to the area they called home from 1946 to 1994.
On Monday, a representative of the two-man task force working on a St. Louis stadium proposal released a statement on behalf of former Anheuser-Busch president Dave Peacock and local attorney Bob Blitz.
“The news today is another reminder of how much competition there can be for National Football League franchises and projects that include NFL stadiums, but it does not change our timeline or approach,” the statement read. “It is important to remember this will be a long-term process, but one that the State of Missouri and the St. Louis region are fully pledged to seeing through. We are ready to demonstrate our commitment to keeping the NFL here, and to continue to illustrate why St. Louis has been and will always be a strong NFL market. We will present a plan to Governor [Jay] Nixon this Friday as scheduled, and we expect that it will meet his criteria, thereby allowing us to share our vision with the public shortly thereafter. In the meantime, we will continue to have discussions with the NFL, as well as Rams leadership.”
Developers of the Hollywood Park project said that no tax dollars would be used for the construction project — including the stadium and more than 4 million square feet of retail, office, hotel and residential space — which could be completed by 2018. Before construction can begin, however, the project must pass several political and environmental hurdles and the Rams must, of course, commit to moving back to Los Angeles after the 2015 season.
“We are excited to unveil an expanded plan that will bring a world-class sports and entertainment district to Hollywood Park,” Terry Fancher, founder of Stockbridge, said in a release. “We are committed to working with [the Kroenke Group] to build a project that will put Inglewood back on the map as home of the truly great sports and entertainment venues.”
Any NFL franchise interested in relocating for the next season would have to apply between Jan. 1 and Feb. 15 of that year, according to league bylaws, and prove it has exhausted all attempts to remain in its current location. The earliest a team could relocate to Los Angeles would be January 2016, and that team would likely play in either the L.A. Coliseum or the Rose Bowl until a new stadium is completed.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said last month that no teams would be moving to Los Angeles for the 2015 season. The two teams that have always made the most sense to relocate to Los Angeles are the last two NFL teams to leave Los Angeles 20 years ago: the Oakland Raiders and the Rams.
The Raiders’ lease to play at O.co Coliseum, formerly known as the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, has expired, and the team is now on a year-to-year agreement. Meanwhile, the Rams can get out of their lease agreement with the St. Louis Convention and Visitors Commission to play at the Edward Jones Dome, as well. The third team in play for L.A., the San Diego Chargers, can announce its intention to leave San Diego between Feb. 1 and May 1 of each year through 2020 if it pays an early-termination fee tied to the bonds used to expand Qualcomm Stadium in 1997.
InvaderRamModeratori bet they add a defensive back later in the draft.
InvaderRamModeratori was hoping there was a stud defensive back who’d be available. maybe landon collins… doubtful with barron on board. i think they need another cornerback.
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This reply was modified 11 years, 5 months ago by
InvaderRam.
InvaderRamModeratorgoodness.
i can’t see any logical reason to make me think that kroenke isn’t planning on moving to los angeles.
and my guess is he moves whether or not the nfl approves of a move.
InvaderRamModeratorummm…
wow.
InvaderRamModeratorthat would require the rams d to be the 2001 ravens or the 2002 bucs.
garsh i hope bradford can stay healthy next year. i hope he can play next year.
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This reply was modified 11 years, 5 months ago by
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