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  • in reply to: When Trump wins #55300
    PA Ram
    Participant

    If it had not been for the “Clinton” brand name, overwhelming support from the establishment, and a fair amount of Clinton cultists, she would not have won the nomination. If it were not for Trump–she could not win the White House.

    The Republicans imploded.

    If she does not somehow become someone she is not–a people’s president, over the next four years–and less of a hawk on foreign policy, the democrats will implode in four years. If the Democratic party does not get this–they are toast.

    Both parties have been encased in their little bubbles and things have changed.

    I don’t know if they can save themselves or not.

    The Democrats will have four years to do it.

    The Republican party is in tatters. They don’t have a clue where they go from here.

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

    in reply to: When Trump wins #55285
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I actually believe that the United States and Russia are very close to war.

    At this point I’d be more surprised if they didn’t have some sort of conflict. Whether it’s the Ukraine, missile shields in Europe or the war in Syria, there are so many hot spots right now, I can’t imagine those plates keep spinning.

    Add to that the cyberattacks and the United States vow to respond, the personal animosity between Putin and Clinton, and you have a recipe for conflict.

    I think it’s going to happen. How long it goes, how limited it will be, I don’t know.

    And I hope I’m wrong.

    But beyond that–when Trump loses the election I wouldn’t be surprised to see white nationalists try to start a race war here or create some sort of anarchy.

    I try to be the optimist(except with the Rams, of course)but I think there are some dark times ahead.

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

    in reply to: future electoral map? #55220
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Pence was in our city yesterday–stopped at a famous local bar.

    The only one from the Clinton side we’ve seen so far is Tim Kaine’s wife.

    Right now things look good for her in Pennsylvania but I really don’t know what to expect. Are there people who are saying they won’t vote for Trump publicly but who will do it when inside the voting booth?

    Nothing can be taken for granted.

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

    in reply to: Jill Stein Claims Clinton Is ‘Scarier’ Than Trump #55218
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I somewhat agree with Stein—at least on the issue of Russia/U.S. relations. Trump would be better for that.

    However, there is more than one way to start WWIII. Trump’s willingness to let other states have nukes is another path to the same thing. So while both may take different paths—both are not going to leave me sleeping easier.

    Putin does make a good point about the anti-missile system in Romania. If the excuse is that it is a defense against missiles from Iran, and we signed the treaty with Iran–than either the treaty wasn’t so great or we’re lying about our reasons. So the U.S. actions aren’t particularly helpful in easing tensions, and frankly–I don’t have a clue what we really expect to happen in Syria but Clinton is all over that. She gets excited talking about Putin and Russia and after the election shenanigans she clearly hates them. That will continue to decline. It really is dangerous.

    But Trump, saying things like Japan getting it’s own nukes, or breaking up NATO and basically allowing new relationships to develop–maybe some dangerous ones–who knows–or pushing “every country for itself” is not a recipe for stability.

    So I think we can look at disastrous foreign policy for at least the next four years no matter what. It won’t be good.

    But I see Trump as a bigger disaster on climate change and a host of other issues.

    So, we have two horrible candidates. I just see one as a bigger disaster.

    I wish the media would devote at least some small portion of the day to policy issues instead of sex and emails–but that isn’t happening.

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

    in reply to: I made bail #54972
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I think anyone would tell you that any plan Nittany devises is almost certainly doomed to failure. He also had the genius idea to hoard as many Galaxy Note 7s he could get his hands on and then sell them on ebay when the demand got high. We know how that worked out.(Now he’s giving away free fire extinguishers with each sale—losing money big time).

    In any case–it’s still your fault. As the Rams were sneakily setting up that fake punt I could very clearly hear you screaming, “It’s a fake!” This alerted the Bills to the plan and of course–the rest is history.

    Still, it’s not really your fault–no matter what Fisher says.. The Rams were getting just a bit ahead of themselves anyway–and the idea of being 4-1 was just a step too far. Now there is order in the universe again.

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

    in reply to: Informal poll: can the Rams beat the Lions? #54966
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Coin flip says…….heads. Rams win.

    I don’t know. Tru is out. Brockers, Hayes, Quinn? Who knows? 4 defensive starters?

    That hurts. Detroit has some weapons.

    Call me a non-believer in this “resurgent” offense until they start getting touchdowns. GZ really is having a nice year.

    Probably another close one. Rams need it really bad. But if they’re missing all these players, I don’t know. I want to believe they will win so I’ll say they will win.

    By a field goal.

    With 3 seconds left.

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

    in reply to: The Wild Card Race #54916
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I agree with your take that this is at best a wild card level team–but with the injuries now–I’m not sure they can make it. It’s going to be tough. They need to string another three wins together and that won’t be easy.

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

    in reply to: reactions to the buffalo loss #54884
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Well, I blame, Zooey. He was there–couldn’t he run onto the field naked and cause a distraction? Where was the effort on his part? We may have to bench him and send zn to the game. Now there’s a guy who would gladly streak across the field for a win.

    In fact, he would gladly streak through the grocery store for a gallon of milk. Of course, his streaking problem is for another thread. Sorry I brought it up.

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

    in reply to: reactions to the buffalo loss #54876
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Come to the Los Angeles Rams–where quarterbacks go to melt down!

    Ugh.

    Heard some on the radio earlier, watched what I could through RedZone.

    I am not happy but I think the game represents more of what the team really is–more a .500(perhaps wild card prospect if things go well) team than a division leading team.

    Case with a bad game.

    Quick looks great.

    The team simply can’t afford the injuries on defense.

    The coaching decisions? Questionable, for sure.

    All adds up to some 7-9 bullshit, perhaps.

    If Johnson is out they have a MAJOR problem.

    Honestly, I appreciate Case, I like Case but if this team is going to need offense to carry the defense for awhile, they can’t do it with field goals and pick sixes.

    Do you wait for a total meltdown and a 3-5 or even 4-4 midway mark before you move on to Goff? Or do you just say, screw it and start the Goff era now? If you lose with him, at least he’s getting experience. If you lose with Case? I’m not sure what that gives you.

    If Goff is hopelessly unprepared right now he should not be the #2. To me, that says he’s ready.

    Maybe it’s time.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 3 months ago by PA Ram.

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

    in reply to: LA Report #54851
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Enjoy the game! If the Rams are losing at halftime I would suggest you leave immediately because clearly you’re a curse and are affecting things on the field. If they do win this thing I’ll expect you to make every home game(yes–including the one in England)to make sure they continue to roll.

    Frankly, it’s the least you can do.

    I’ll be doing my part by making sure I continue wearing these “lucky” socks which I’ve had on since game #2. No–I will NOT take them off as long as the Rams are winning. I don’t care about the wife making me sleep in the car. Some things are too important.

    Have fun!!!!!

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

    in reply to: My view of the team so far #54627
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I’m glad you’re doing well. That has to be a terrifying thing.

    I just wanted to comment on the Gurley thing. I don’t believe the blocking or scheme is working right now–but what did they change from last year? I just don’t understand what the big difference is. Just not getting it done up front?

    Having said that–I really do think that Gurley shares at least SOME of the blame. He used to get through some of these holes but now he seems to lose his balance easier as he’s tripping through the line. I think there may be some pressing on his part–some impatience with the line. He may need that second for the hole to open and he’s already buried into the pile.

    I’m sure they’re working with him.

    I know this isn’t exactly a fair comparison but Tavon has 6 rushes for 24 yards(4.0 yards a carry) and Cunningham has 4 carries for 32 yards(8 yards a carry–although his long is 22 to be fair).

    Gurley has a 2.6 yards per carry average.

    Even if he can’t break the big one–it’s still surprising he doesn’t have a better average–at least something near 4 yards would be nice.

    So yes–I am questioning Gurley himself–at least a little bit. I think this combination of things needs to be solved. It all has to work together and right now it isn’t. Try something different with him. I know they’re doing a lot of running into the middle this year. That clearly ain’t working,.

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

    in reply to: Ray Lewis & panel discuss NFL defenses including LA #54626
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Okay–here is my “out there” observation or comment of the day:

    If you are a great defensive coach…why aren’t you at least a good offensive coach? I mean–you know how to STOP offenses–you have to have some understanding of them. Wouldn’t you also have a pretty good understanding of how to attack a defense? If you understand enough about different offenses to attack them and stop them…wouldn’t you know the things that can really hurt a defense?

    Why can some teams look so unbalanced to one side of the football. Sean Payton gets the opposite rap in New Orleans–great offense–lousy defense. Do they just not know an offensive player when they see one? Is it personnel issues more than scheme?

    Why does that happen?

    Buddy Ryan–great defensive coach. Offense, not so much. He seemed indifferent to the offense.

    Now some guys CAN do both. Belichek, Walsh.

    But some guys get this label of one or the other and I wonder why that happens.

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

    in reply to: informal poll: can the Rams beat the Bills? #54529
    PA Ram
    Participant

    If you think about these games–it is scary to think how easily the Rams could be 0-4 instead of 3-1. The margin is that close.

    They have not dominated one team and have been blown out one time.

    Everyone I see these days looks at me with shock that the Rams are 3-1. They get that look you see when someone sees something that just doesn’t make any sense, or is trying to figure out a puzzle.

    I have no explanation for them.

    ARE the Rams truly a 3-1 team?

    Well–they say you are what your record says you are. Maybe.

    But 4 games in and I’m still not sure who the Rams really are. If they keep playing these tight–let your defense make a stop with seconds to go to win it–games, they will see the coin flip and lose some heartbreakers.

    Is this one of those games?

    Maybe. I can’t say I have a good feeling about it. But I’m trying to solve that puzzle too.

    I will say that the home field carries them this week in probably another nail biter.

    And we still won’t really know who they are and will be wondering next week if they can really win on the road at Detroit.

    By week 8 I expect to have a better idea of what this team really is. For now–I’m just enjoying the wins.

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

    in reply to: Gaines makes big impact in return at cornerback #54470
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Yeah–I notice that Johnson didn’t thank Sensabaugh for his efforts.

    But I was happy with Gaines performance in his first game back. I hope he stays healthy. They’ll be fine with Gaines and Johnson.

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

    in reply to: Joe Curley Tweets on GR and the OL #54469
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Fan blogger or not, I agree with Nittany that the Gurley point may be a good one.

    Well, but, as we know, both you and Nittany are Eagles fans.

    Nevertheless, it is possible that Gurley is not settling down enough in this offense. Point taken.

    Even Eagles fans can make a point now and then.

    ..

    Well, for the record there is a long history of Eagles/Rams connections.

    Harold Jackson, Roman Gabriel, Ron Jaworski, Sam Bradford, Rodney Mcleod and let’s not forget Mike Schad.

    So this is all a natural thing.

    I would point out, however, that Nittany always steered more toward Amish Soccer when he was in Pennsylvania. I believe the Lancaster Butterchurners were his team.

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

    in reply to: Joe Curley Tweets on GR and the OL #54464
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Fan blogger or not, I agree with Nittany that the Gurley point may be a good one.

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

    in reply to: Joe Curley Tweets on GR and the OL #54458
    PA Ram
    Participant

    A different take on the OL overall-in this one–except for Robinson. Some good Gurley observations. Is it time to start asking if Gurley himself is part of the problem?

    http://www.turfshowtimes.com/2016/10/3/13148858/la-rams-arizona-cardinals-recap

    The Los Angeles Rams are now 3-1 with the Cardinals and Panthers both 1-3. The world has now seen seven rookies and/or first-time starters play for five teams — the Browns, Eagles, Patriots, Cowboys, and Broncos — and have all won. Meanwhile, the Rams continue to sit the number one overall pick, QB Jared Goff.

    It’s official, nothing in the world makes sense anymore…

    Yet here we are, speaking of the Rams after four weeks as one of the winning-est teams in the NFL this season. It hasn’t been pretty but it has worked thus far. The Rams are 3-1 for the first time in ten years. And here’s how they did it:

    Rams QB Case Keenum is setting himself up for a helluva pay day this offseason. No, he won’t break the bank as one of the highest paid QB’s in the NFL as a franchise signal caller, but he is proving to be one of the better stopgap QB’s in the NFL. If he continues to play like he has, and show the undeniable leadership he has shown, that will be enough to get him top back-up money. He could cash in on a Eagles QB Chase Daniel-caliber deal. The errant throws are there, but not often enough to burn the house down. He doesn’t have the arm to be a long term answer, however, he plays smart, tough, good enough football. He has the mental make up you want your QB to have and it’s evident through all four of his starts this season. His confidence is riding high. He made two plays that will standout to most watching. Those two plays are his 32-yard run, and the Houdini act he pulled out of the Cardinals’ ass to complete a 24-yard completion to TE Lance Kendricks. Sadly, both were wiped out by stupid penalties committed by OT Greg Robinson. However, the THREE plays that stand out to me are the missed throws, two of which would have gone to WR Tavon Austin, and one to WR Brian Quick. The two to Austin both would have gone for big gains of at least 20 yards if not more considering he was in a lot of open space. The other throw to Quick was an underthrow, which allowed the corner to break up the pass, on fourth and five. The most interesting part of these plays is all three are plays in which Cardinals CB Patrick Peterson was beat by the receiver. You don’t beat that guy that much often, so when you do, you have to make it count.
    The offensive line has done a really nice job with pass protection through the first four weeks. The Cardinals have a really nice pass rush working in their favor, and for most of the afternoon the Rams held them in check. Aside from two sacks from edge rushers Chandler Jones and Markus Golden, Keenum was only touched three times on 34 drop backs. Robinson might have played his worst game of the season for the Rams, but oddly enough, outside of the two penalties, and the sack allowed to Jones, he was very good on about 47 of the other 52 snaps he played. However, his mistakes were costly enough that they killed 56 yards between two plays — deep in the opponents territory — and led to a fumble and turnover.
    Rams RB Todd Gurley is becoming his own worst enemy. You can see him in every post-game interview pouting and looking all sad — whether the team wins or loses — because he is not getting the big time gains he wants. However, I mentioned in last weeks recap he was not seeing the holes, and he is running without patience to set up the blocks. This was the case again against the Cardinals. By my count he missed four gaping holes that had he seen and hit surely at the very least all would have gotten him 10-20 yard gains. There is one play that stood out more then the others to me. It’s because the Cardinals ran the exact same play, to the exact same side, with the exact same looks, and had different results.
    I received a message from one TST reader that asked me to show what I meant about his lack of vision and patience, so here you go…

    r

    Derrik Klassen
    As you can see in the footage above, the Rams run a stretch to the right of the formation against another stacked box with eight defenders. The play is blocked unbelievably well. The offensive line moves the entire front side of the defensive line 3-4 yards off the ball. On the backside, C Tim Barnes and LG Rodger Saffold chop down the defenders. As you can see it creates a hole that is about five yards wide. If Gurley slows down (patience) and looks about a yard to his left (vision), there is a good chance he’s still running today. Instead he just barrels into the back of his linemen for no reason whatsoever.

    r

    Here we see the Cardinals run the exact same play and get the exact same hole, but the result is much different. RB Chris Johnson slows down as he presses the hole, looks to his left about a yard, sees the opening hits it and falls into the end zone. It is literally the exact same. And the Cardinals ran it again two drives later with David Johnson. The result was a 31-yard gain, his longest of the day.

    I get it. Gurley is a helluva talent and a damn good back, but without patience and vision you’re only average at best. Add a stacked box, and you’re mediocre. Rams fans, try not to forget that for nine seasons straight, no running back in the NFL saw more stacked boxes than RB Steven Jackson. But due to his vision and patience — coupled with his superstar talents — he ran for over 1,000 yards in each of those seasons regardless.

    The Rams receivers looked the best they have looked in years. They took advantage of the stacked boxes by catching the ball and picking up huge gains. Because everyone is so heavily stacked within five yards of the line of scrimmage. If the receivers catch the ball they have a ton of running room. But the issue has been catching the ball. Well yesterday they did just that, and it resulted in a nine yard per attempt average for Keenum. Austin was about a quarter of an inch from beating Peterson for about 45 yards, they call it a game of inches for a reason. Quick, made the two biggest plays of the game on the other hand. He only had two receptions, but they were the difference in the game. Then there’s WR Kenny Britt. He had — yet again — another solid outing. Britt hauled in four receptions for 82 yards. He was only thrown to four times, making him perfect on the day. After four weeks, Britt is on pace for 72 rec and 1124 yards. If you recall from HBO Hard Knocks, at one point in the stands, Keenum’s wife is speaking with her friend and she mentions Keenum worked out a lot in the off season with Britt. It looks like they’ve formed a chemistry, and its paying off.
    The defensive line was able to do what they have always done — in recent years — against the Cardinals and that’s make life hell for the QB. It’s actually becoming a bit unsafe for Cardinal QB’s to play the Rams, as each of the last three seasons, the Rams have knocked the starter out of the game. DL Aaron Donald finally got his sack. In fact he got one and a half, as he and DE Eugene Sims split one. Now if you notice, I labeled Donald as a DL as opposed to DT. That is because the man is proving the can play anywhere. Due to the ankle injury which held DE William Hayes out, Donald played a lot of DE. He excelled here as well, and it is actually where he got both of his sacks. DE Robert Quinn was inches away from a four sack game. The refs missed blatant holding by the tackle in all four instances, as he did whatever he could to keep Quinn from making the play. The Rams depth on the line is often talked about but even so, I don’t believe people truly understand how deep they are. Reserve DT Dominique Easley and DEs Ethan Westbrooks and Matt Longacre were exceptional. They applied pressure regularly and all played the run at or near All-Pro levels.
    This in my opinion was LB Alec Ogletree’s best game. I called him out for being undisciplined last week. Well this week it was the exact opposite. He was exceptional and constantly in the right place at the right time. However, it was LB/S Mark Barron that was the guy that was handling business all over the field. His interception with just under two min left should have sealed the deal, but poor play calling on the offensive side gave the ball back to the Cardinals for another opportunity. He won’t get credit for it, but he was the cause of two tackles for loss, just by forcing the ball carrier into the pile. Barron played a near flawless game, and he deserves to be recognized for it.
    The secondary had their best game of the season. Oddly enough, that didn’t happen until the second half when CB E.J. Gaines no longer left the field. Why he did not start and why he only play a few snaps is beyond me. CBs Troy Hill and Coty Sensabaugh should never see the field again — outside of special teams — even if there is an injury. It took Hill getting toasted three times on one drive, which ended with Hill giving up a touchdown to WR Michael Floyd to remove him from the lineup. I can’t help but wonder if they even score if Gaines is on the field the entire time. But aside from good coverage, the best part of Gaines’ return is his tackling. He made the plays that Sensabaugh and Hill have only dreamed of. Filling and sealing the edge on runs correctly, and making timely hits in the pass game. Welcome back E.J. CB Trumaine Johnson easily played his best game of the year. He had six pass deflections and an interception. However, the second interception which was reversed should have stood. He got one foot down, and toe tapped with the other before the foot went out of bounds. Last I checked, the toe tap still counted as in bounds. The hit of the day went to SS T.J. McDonald. He blew up Floyd forcing an important in-completion and making Flyod hit the ground so hard that he did a front flip after impact. I have never seen that happen after hitting the ground.
    Coaching was good in this game. For the second week in a row, OC Rob Boras called a really good game. He realizes teams aren’t going to stop stacking the box until the Rams prove their pass game is dangerous. Well they did just that against Arizona. The box will likely still be stacked next week, but if they can have success passing for another game or two, things will surely loosen up. His best coaching decision was throwing the ball to Gurley. While Gurley is without question having issues running the ball on his own, he’s still a dynamite talent, and getting him in the open field has to always be apart of the game plan. Boras did however, call three straight boneheaded plays with less than two min left. You know they are selling out against the run. You only need one first down and the game is over, why not just call a simple play-action boot, get Keenum on the edge and hit a receiver in the flat or ten yard out. It worked for you on three other occasions in the same game.
    HC Jeff Fisher needs to be fired for those horrible challenges. He wasted two timeouts in a tight game, where if not for the interceptions late, the Rams could have very well needed them. However, he won’t be fired. And do you want to know why? Because the Los Angeles Rams are 3-1 for the first time in 10 years with a backup QB on his watch.

    Fisherball is here to stay…

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

    in reply to: Joe Curley Tweets on GR and the OL #54457
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Cody Swartz ‏@cbswartz5 21h21 hours ago Hershey, PA
    According to @pfref, Todd Gurley is first RB in NFL history with 80+ carries in his team’s first 4 games and YPC under 2.75 (2.63).

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

    in reply to: Rams beat ARZ reaction thread #54306
    PA Ram
    Participant

    This was a good day. First the wife calls from work and says she’s hungry for stromboli so we skip the diet today and hit the pizza shop! And then—the Rams win!!!!!!

    This team just does not make it easy—but a win is a win is a win.

    At 3-1, don’t look for Goff any time soon. I have to wonder if Keenum is the game manager the Rams needed, and if they had not traded for Goff and drafted a Will Fuller instead, and another lineman, and had the picks for next year…well–maybe that would be enough.

    Doesn’t matter.

    3-1 feels great.

    Not only that–they have beaten the cards and Seahawks each once. At best those teams can only even the series this year. And the Cards are in a world of hurt right now.

    So anyway—how bout that Brian Quick–eh?

    I’m just going to enjoy this for now. Feels good.

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

    in reply to: Game Day Menu #54268
    PA Ram
    Participant

    My wife is dieting again which means I’m dieting. We have to TRACK everything on our phone apps. I’m starving. This sucks. That pie sounds good right about now and pizza–damn you Nittany!

    Three On-Cor chicken patties will cost me 600 calories, plus a salad(not much) and water.

    It’s a good bargain. I’m playing with roughly 2,000 calories a day so I have room for breakfast and lunch.

    Warden–let me out!!!!!!!

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

    in reply to: Game Day Menu #54264
    PA Ram
    Participant

    r

    Fine dining tonight.

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

    in reply to: Fewer people are watching the NFL on TV #54216
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Well, I am not going to pay $1,000/year, or whatever it is when you add the NFL package charge to the monthly dish charge. If I had a satellite anyway, I would possibly be tempted, but I think they charge too much. I don’t understand why anybody pays it.

    I watch the Rams on TV when they are broadcast for free. But I have had it with being fleeced for entertainment.

    Yeah–I’ll watch them when they’re on or see what I can through RedZone. If they offered a Rams package for a reasonable price I’d look at it.

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

    in reply to: Fewer people are watching the NFL on TV #54207
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I think it’s probably a generational thing too. Kids today grow up with so many things screaming for their attention. It’s different. Also–fantasy football has changed things a bit. People can be actively involved managing their own teams and so team loyalty isn’t what it used to be. They can follow through stats. You have the Madden games which offer another football like diversion with active participation plus a million other games.

    Then there is the internet itself. There is the free streaming.

    There is the cost of going to an actual game.

    And don’t forget the cost to support a team through merchandise. Not cheap stuff.

    It’s lots of things–but I’m not so sure the NFL’s plan to take over the world will work.

    Corporations believe growth–one way or another. The reality is there is no such thing.

    What’s after the world?

    Space? Alien populations?

    It can’t grow forever–and people, generations and their interests change.

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

    in reply to: this week's Goff commentaries #54106
    PA Ram
    Participant

    The only real problem is that they get him “cheap” for four years. So take one of those years away–in terms of watching him perform, him getting the on field experience, etc. and you have 3 years to see if he’s the real deal before you have to make a decision on giving him big money in the second contract. Now the first year he plays will be the year you just let him learn. So it’ll be hard to know anything. So essentially you’ll have two good years to see him and decide whether he really is the guy.

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

    in reply to: Debate comments? #53999
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I didn’t watch it. I watched a very weird movie called “Lobster”
    instead.

    It’ll be interesting to see if the polls change any now that there’s
    been a ‘debate’.

    w
    v

    I saw that film. It has gotten great reviews by the way. While it had some interesting elements to it I thought that it failed as a good film. Part of the problem was that it fell into a sort of black “dramady” territory. Black comedy? Okay. Dark drama? Okay. Mixing the two? Not so much.

    I thought that the actors nailed the tone of the film. But the film itself, in trying to be so different, failed to be good.

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

    in reply to: Can the Rams beat Arizona in Arizona? #53973
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I think it’s tough. Second road game against a desperate opponent. And they traveled from west to east–back to west and that Tampa game was draining. The defense won the Seahawks game and at the end the defense had to win the Tampa game. They are going to need the offense to truly step up–control the clock and win one. I’m not sure they can do it this week against the Cards.

    I expect a loss this week.

    I hope I’m wrong.

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

    in reply to: vid: final play, Quinn tackles Winston #53972
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Yeah–he was trapped. He was beyond the line of scrimmage so he couldn’t throw the ball. And he really had no where to go. A great running QB may have had a chance. Winston is not a great runner.

    Good coverage on the play by the defense.

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

    in reply to: Anybody watchin the Great Debate this week? #53971
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I am so disgusted with this election and politics in general that I’ve sort of checked out. I’ll see some highlights but I just don’t feel like getting my blood pressure up about it anymore. I’ll vote for Clinton on election day and the chips will fall where they may.

    It’s out of my control.

    This election process is a joke. The two crappy candidates we have to choose from are a joke. the media circus covering all of this is a joke. Some of the people voting in this election and their thought process is a joke.

    But it’s not remotely funny.

    I will vote, follow some issues and whatever will be will be.

    In the meantime I’ll find distracting things like football to occupy my mind.

    I’m sick of it all.

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

    in reply to: the press on the TAMPA game #53869
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Make no mistake–the Rams are fortunate to be 2-1. They sure tried to give this game away. They certainly need discipline. But they did enough to win. It is what it is.

    Big challenge this week. Hopefully they get some guys back–including Gaines which would be a big boost.

    Just 6 more wins to break out of the 7-9 bullshit.

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

    PA Ram
    Participant

    Gurley’s post game press conference. Todd never looks comfortable talking to the press. He doesn’t like it.

    I believe you’re right. He does not seem to like talking to the press. To be fair, they do seem to ask a lot of the same questions or some dumb questions:”What music were you listening to?”

    I would not like talking to them either.

    “PA Ram, what music were you listening to during the Tampa Celebration Thread?”

    “Uh…you know…some Bette Midler….the Mama Mia soundtrack–stuff like that.”

    One thing I do not like is Fantasy Football. I sometimes wonder if it changes some players mental attitude toward the game. Do players worry as much about their fantasy stats as they do the win or loss? Are they disappointed when they don’t rack up big fantasy numbers?

    It seems to take away from the whole “team” concept of football and shifts it to individual achievements.

    No–I don’t like fantasy football.

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

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