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znModeratorFeelings have often, if not mostly always, trumped facts
in elections.Talking-feeling-monkeys.
Anyway, J.Oliver should give equal time to Hillary’s flaws.
crooked-narcissist-egomaniac-pro-corporate-Billionaire-Donald.
vs
Crooked-Neoliberal-pro-Corporate-empire-builder-hawk-Hillary.Whats a talking-feeling monkey
to do?w
vThe talking monkeys can begin by making the Donald list more realistically reflect the actual problems.
How about adding racist hyper-nationalist sexist lying demagogue who will appoint an anti-choice supreme court while lowering taxes on the upper brackets in an already inequality-mired economy.
For starters.

znModeratorPolice visit Tre Mason’s home five times in four months
Police visit Tre Mason’s home five times in four months
In early March, Rams running back Tre Mason had a bizarre incident with police, resulting in his arrest on various charges. He then failed to appear in court, before eventually doing so.
Since then, police reportedly have been called to his house on five different occasions. According to TMZ, the most recent incident happened on Saturday.
Per the report, Mason’s family is concerned about his mental health. During one of the police visits, he agreed to check into a facility. He apparently didn’t.
Mason has not yet been accused of assaulting family members. On one occasion, a family member told police that Mason hadn’t slept in days, and that the family member was concerned if Mason left the house “he will get hurt.”
Mason didn’t participate in OTAs this year, excused from the voluntary sessions for “personal reasons.” The next question for the Rams is whether Mason, a third-round pick in 2014, will be welcomed to training camp — and whether he’ll even show up for it.
znModeratorLOOK: Tavon Austin is working with the best WR in the NFL
Tavon Austin is putting in work with Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown, according to his Instagram account. Austin has been seen all over social media consistently working out and trying to develop as a more pure wide receiver. This is one of many steps in the right direction.
Austin has a new coach, Rams passing game coordinator and wide receivers coach Mike Groh, who is ready to help him just like he helped players from the Chicago Bears and Alabama Crimson Tide. Austin, sooner or later, is going to be a stellar wide receiver that teams fear and not just a Swiss army knife.
Spending time with the All-Pro WR Brown will hopefully rub off on the 5-foot-8 speedster. He could learn a thing or two off of Brown’s illustrious route running.
znModerator
znModeratorFurther problems could arise depending on the status of starting strong safety T.J. McDonald, who was arrested in May on suspicion of driving under the influence of a substance other than alcohol.
As of this week, McDonald had not been charged with a crime, so he is likely to participate in camp, but should the situation change, add another potential training-camp battle to the mix.
Link: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/rams-723448-camp-goff.html
znModerator
znModeratornot everyone thinks Trump would be that much worse than Hillary.
IMO? Yes he would be THAT much worse.
That’s my honest opinion of it.
FWIW I don’t disagree with you. But I think a lot of leftists, Greens and ‘anti-insider’ types don’t see it that way.
Then to me? Many of those…not all because I know a lot of people who are wrestling with that…are just a different kind of party purist. That’s what I believe (and I may draw flack for it too.)
DT = a lot worse.
znModeratornot everyone thinks Trump would be that much worse than Hillary.
IMO? Yes he would be THAT much worse.
That’s my honest opinion of it.
July 25, 2016 at 11:11 am in reply to: huddle board exclusive–we set up a board chat with the football gods #49343
znModeratorIf Rodger Saffold is at his own 25 yard line and is running at a speed of 8.0 yards/sec and a defender at the 50 yard line is approaching Rodger Saffold at a speed of 9.5 yards/sec, how many seconds will elapse before Rodger Saffold is injured?
I was sent this response.
====
Football God 1: why is it that good men, and good players, like Roger Saffold, get injured constantly, while assholes like Steve Smith make it through unscathed and become stars?
Football God 2: Yes, why? Why?
Football God 3: Actually we did that.
[pause]
All: Group laughter.

znModerator


znModeratorAldon Smith Allegedly Persicopes Himself Smoking Weed
In the video provided by CSN Bay Area, Smith is heard talking on camera saying it is a fire up session and telling a woman not to worry because they don’t have a lot of followers.
You would think all athletes should know it only takes one person watching for it to go viral.
Here is the transcript of the convo provided by CSN Bay Area.
Female: (Expletive deleted), I’m not (messing) with you.
Male: I don’t give a (care). Ain’t nobody (messing) with us. We’ve got zero followers. Where is the ashtray at?( to audience) This is what you call a fire up session.
Female: (Expletive deleted), you shouldn’t even be posting that.
Male: (coughing) (Expletive deleted), do you see my face?
Female: No, but what if…
Male: They don’t have my name. This is just a fire up session.
Female: So, if you just put it on there…it’s just doing it? It’s live? That’s hella stupid.
Male: Shut up. You hella stupid. You trying to smoke, fam? Is this the ashtray?
Female: Yeah. You ain’t using it no more, right?
Male: I’m using it.
Female: Oh, that’s a (expletive deleted) (inaudible)? Oh, a (inaudible)?
Male: You’re stupid. You’re tripping. (Expletive deleted), they don’t know it’s me. It’s not like I put “Aldon Smith”…
Smith is currently indefinitely suspended from the NFL for violating the substance abuse policy and various run ins with the law.
Flip the page to watch the video..
znModeratorI went ahead and edited the image into your post.
.
znModeratorClimate Change exists four times each year where I live. Inequality exists too as Hildabeast getting a pass on her email crimes proves.
bnw, do you think man-made climate change is happening? And do you think we have a serious problem of economic inequality? Politics aside. Politicians aside. Do you think these things exist as serious issues in their own right?
Of course climate change is happening four times each year where I live. But ‘climate change’ is used by those to obscure the fraud of ‘global warming’ that despite all the money and data manipulation and data destruction and endless propaganda hurled upon humankind the earth is cooling not warming.
Yes the economic inequality here is so bad that people from around the world still try to make their way here any way they can legally and illegally. If I knew how to post pictures I could show some exceptional Cuban efforts.
For the record, I think denying climate change discredits the person doing it.
Immigration has nothing to do with the internal structures of american economic inequality. We can have failed policies that do nothing but put money in the pockets of the 1% and therefore destablize the american middle class, and it could still be comparatively attractive to immigrants. The one has nothing to do with the other.
You are free to advocate any candidate or position you are drawn to. And you’re a passionate committed rightie. But I find most passionate committed righties to be lacking when it comes to the major issues. So I defend your right to speak here (within the rules) but I personally don’t find your political statements to be credible. I get that you believe them, but I think you believe a lot of nonsense.
Unlike BT and WV I don’t see any point in trying to debate it, either. There’s no “winning” discussions like that. You go your way, I’ll go mine.
.
July 24, 2016 at 10:59 am in reply to: 'Legends of the Dome' … with some Jim Fadler periscope vids #49290
znModeratorFinally, a happy day for Rams fans at Legends game
Jose de Jesus Ortiz
Still bitter about the Rams’ move to Los Angeles, Greg Gebert initially didn’t want to attend the Legends of the Dome game. The more he thought about it, though, the more he realized he couldn’t pass up a chance to see the superstars who brought him so much joy.
Gebert eventually bought a pair of tickets and made the drive east from Wentzville with his 4-year-old son, Tyler. Then as the clock ticked closer to kickoff for the flag football game Saturday afternoon, he saw Kurt Warner on the surface where the legendary quarterback once led the Greatest Show on Turf.
Gebert cradled his son, rushed toward Warner and asked if he would take a selfie with him.
“Sure,” Warner said with a gentle, patient smile as fans crowded him even though he had already signed hundreds of autographs during a VIP reception.
The Geberts were like most of the 10,600 fans who attended the Legends of the Dome charity flag football game, which benefited the Isaac Bruce Foundation.
Many of the greatest names from the Rams’ 21 years in St. Louis — including several of the men who won Super Bowl XXXIV — returned to the Dome at America’s Center. Warner, Bruce, Hall of Famers Aeneas Williams and Orlando Pace, wide receiver Torry Holt and former coaches Dick Vermeil and Mike Martz were among the biggest names in town for the flag football game.
“In 1999 I was just graduating high school and we went from a team that wasn’t that exciting to all of a sudden just exploding on the scene and completely dominating every game,” Gebert said. “I think it was an uplift for the city. You got football back after the Cardinals left and you kind of do something that’s magical that probably had not been done before and probably will never be done again.”
It’s unclear if the NFL will ever return to St. Louis. If the NFL does put another franchise in the Gateway to the West it won’t be anytime soon.
But even despised Rams owner Stan Kroenke cannot rob the St. Louis fans of their fond memories.
Fittingly, Warner connected with Bruce on a beautiful long touchdown pass to open the scoring for the Blue squad, which eventually lost 56-49 to the White squad led by Pace and Vermeil.
“It was awesome,” Bruce said. “We came out with the mindset of just making the fans happy and having them come out and having a good time. Mission accomplished.
“In two words, thank you. That’s basically what we wanted to come out here and say.”
Mission accomplished indeed.
“Hopefully we gave that love back out tonight to the fans,” Pace said. “And hopefully some of those guys that may be a little bitter (about the Rams’ departure) got a chance to smile a little bit and reminisce on the old times of when we played in here for real.
“To give this Dome its proper shutdown is really special also. We had a great time here. Hopefully they loved the time we spent here. The special thing about it is we gave this city a championship. That’s something nobody could ever take away.”
The intimate crowd had such a good time they didn’t offer the familiar “Kroenke Sucks” chant until the third quarter.
Cancer survivor Gail Johnson, 53, wore a faded blue Rams hat and a white T-shirt honoring her late cousin Steve Willis, who was a fixture at Rams home games.
With a small portable oxygen tank hanging from her shoulder and feeding her oxygen through a nasal tube, Johnson once again cheered on her Rams.
“My cousin died three years ago of heart disease,” Johnson said. “Man, right there on 7th and Cole streets he and my sister faithfully tailgated through all kind of weather. I love this team because to me personally I saw they had big hearts.
“People like Isaac Bruce and Aeneas Williams have big hearts. It was more than just about winning Super Bowls or playoffs. They also gave back to the community. … Those things mean something.”
The players and coaches also enjoyed the opportunity to see each other again. Vermeil even wore his Super Bowl championship ring.
Many of the players got their teammates to sign their jerseys before, during and after the game.
“I don’t wear it very often; it’s so big,” Vermeil said of his championship ring. “But it was nice to be able to put it on with the people who put it on for me. They’re the people that won it and earned it. To be able to share a day like this with them is really fun.”
The players were asked to autograph several pieces of memorabilia.
Gerard Oscko, 58, arrived at the game with a framed copy of the special section the Post-Dispatch put out after Warner led the Rams to the Super Bowl title.
“I’m getting signatures on the back side (of the frame)” Oscko said. “It’s been hanging on the wall for 16 years. It brings back memories of how special this team was and how great they were and what it meant to the city and the enthusiasm that they brought to it.”
Many fans are still bitter that Kroenke moved the Rams back to Los Angeles, but it’s clear they don’t hold the move against the former players.
“I wouldn’t have been surprised if nobody showed up being a little bit vindictive or a little mad with the Rams organization,” Vermeil said. “But in knowing the St. Louis people like I got to know them over three years, this is really what I expected for them to come and support and show class. I think they enjoyed seeing all these guys again, too.”
znModeratorPartisan barbs.
Shrug.
July 24, 2016 at 9:17 am in reply to: 'Legends of the Dome' … with some Jim Fadler periscope vids #49276
znModeratorGreatest Show goes out in style in Legends of the Dome
Jim Thomas
So where was the defense? It was just a rumor Saturday.
The running game was non-existent. Special teams were nowhere to be found.
Clock management was questionable at the end of the first half. And the second-guessers will have a field day mulling over the decision to replace Kurt Warner with Dave Barr in the fourth quarter.
Yeah, the offensive pyrotechnics were great, but there is plenty to work on for the St. Louis Rams.
“Had to fire the defensive coordinator at halftime,” Mike Martz said. “I think he’s at a bar someplace, drinking his sorrows away.”
OK. Just kidding.
A good time was had by all in the Dome at America’s Center, with Dick Vermeil’s White squad outlasting Martz’s Blue team 56-49 in the Legends of the Dome charity flag football game.
The departure of Stan Kroenke’s Rams to Los Angeles remains a gut punch for football fans in the area. And with training camps opening around the NFL this week, it’s another painful reminder that there will be no pro football in St. Louis this fall.
But except for some brief chants of “Kroenke sucks! Kroenke sucks!” late in the third quarter, all those bad feelings were put aside for a few hours. The crowd of 10,600 was smaller than hoped for by the Isaac Bruce Foundation, which organized the game, but the afternoon turned out to be a celebration, not a funeral.
“Knowing the St. Louis fan, it shouldn’t have surprised me,” Vermeil said. “But I was a little concerned. I actually mentioned it to Isaac months ago, that you might get a negative reaction. You might not get what you want. It cost a lot of money (to organize). So for the fans to come and do what they did today shows you what class they have as a city.”
Hall of Fame defensive back Aeneas Williams has settled in St. Louis, so he knows first-hand what Rams fans here are going through.
“You see how disappointed fans are, how hurt some fans are, but to have the fans that turned out and put all that aside (was great),” Williams said. “This was a special time in St. Louis sports where we had a unique window of excellence with a bunch of unselfish players.”
More than three dozen former Rams players were on hand for the game, most from the Greatest Show on Turf era of Super Bowls and touchdowns, touchdowns and more touchdowns.
Tiffani Burris, who heads Bruce’s foundation, didn’t miss a beat in organizing the event. Player introductions were done with Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmir” playing on the stadium sound system, just like in the glory days.
When the man of the hour, Bruce, was introduced, “Whoomp! (There it Is)” was played — sung in these parts as “Bruce! (There It Is)”
There were flames shooting up from the corner of the southeast end zone as each player was introduced. (No, the turf didn’t catch on fire this time.) And retired Navy Petty Officer Generald Wilson, a legend of the Dome in his own right, belted out the national anthem.
In the locker room before the game, there were even six dozen Krispy Kremes — four dozen glazed, two dozen chocolate — for the Donut Bros. and friends.
But times have changed. Offensive linemen Adam Timmerman and Andy McCollum, aka the Donut Bros., are thin enough to play tight end these days. They look more like the Kale Bros. as they raise families and approach middle age.
“We’re fit and trim,” Timmerman said.
Once the game started, the teams scored more touchdowns in two hours than recent Rams teams managed over a couple of years in the Dome. There were TDs on 15 of the day’s 17 possessions. Warner and Marc Bulger looked fantastic throwing the ball.
“This shows how unimportant coaching is,” Vermeil said. “You see those quarterbacks throw the ball. It’s amazing.”
Unofficially, Bulger must have been about 73 of 76 for 700 yards. He had to be fibbing last week when he said he hadn’t picked up a football in years.
Just about everyone in uniform was on the receiving end, from mainstays Bruce, Torry Holt, Ricky Proehl and Az-Zahir Hakim to kicker Jeff Wilkins and punter Sean Landeta.
Wilkins, already a grandfather back in his hometown of Youngstown, Ohio, was one of the day’s most productive pass-catchers. “I think he missed his calling,” Bulger said.
But late in the game, Wilkins basically got tackled by Chris Massey after a reception and suffered an ankle injury. He had his left foot wrapped afterward. There was irony there, because Massey served as Wilkins’ long snapper for years on extra points and field goals.
It was just one example of the competitive juices flowing, fun outing or not.
“You knew it was gonna be competitive,” said linebacker Mike “The Tackle” Jones. “Isaac’s competitive. Torry’s competitive. There’s a lot of guys out here that don’t like losing.”
Williams, for example, wasn’t going to play because of a sore ankle, but there he was lined up in press coverage at the start of the game.
“When you get around your guys, and guys like Dre’ Bly start encouraging you, you just get out here and you get going,” Williams said.
There was enough athleticism and natural talent on display, even with most of the players in their 40s, to make you realize that what happened with the Greatest Show was no fluke.
But even with all the star power on display, let it be known that the last Rams touchdown scored in the Dome came on a keeper by Barr, who played in two games and completed five of nine passes for the inaugural 1995 St. Louis team. It was his only season with the team.
July 23, 2016 at 10:58 pm in reply to: Rams' first camp back in Cal will feature battles at QB, receiver & secondary #49261
znModeratorJust by observing OTAs, there’s a clear difference in the way Groh runs his drills. He heavily focuses on precise route running and making contested catches.
Nice. A real observation.
July 23, 2016 at 10:17 pm in reply to: Fisher adamant he won't rush Goff into a starting role at quarterback #49253
znModeratorOf course, this is an old and familiar topic.
But this article has some bits in it you don’t see in the articles that came before it.
It covers more ground.
Some samples:
..
Warner sees tools in Goff that suggest he could be one of those special few – the footwork, the pocket presence, the quick release. Still, no matter when Goff starts, the former Rams star assures there will be growing pains. It’s how Goff navigates those obstacles that could very well define him.
“Being a starter Day 1 goes beyond how smart (Goff) is, how well he knows an offense, what kind of throws he can make,” Warner said. “It’s the demeanor that makes up who that player is. “How is he going to handle failure?”
..
With Mariota, that meant installing counter option fakes and half-field reads to ease his transition from Oregon’s spread offense. For Winston, who came from a pro-style system at Florida State, the Bucs more or less trusted him to adapt to the system they had in place. Both strategies, in their own ways, worked.
..
In speaking with his former pupil, Franklin says Goff has noticed a number of similarities between Cal’s offensive concepts and those he’s learning in Los Angeles – somewhat contrary to the concerns about his ability to transition from an Air Raid offense at Cal.
..
…during OTAs, Fisher gave some indication, refusing to simplify defensive coverages against Goff. “That’s just not our nature,” he said.
July 23, 2016 at 10:04 pm in reply to: 'Legends of the Dome' … with some Jim Fadler periscope vids #49249
znModeratoroff the net from Marshall’s Faulk28HOF
It’s a very nice crowd here… It as well done. Bruce and Holt look like the KT could suit up right now. Warner and Bulger are throwing darts. It’s a bitter sweet time.
Last time I’ll sit in this dome. Damn.
July 23, 2016 at 9:44 pm in reply to: 'Legends of the Dome' … with some Jim Fadler periscope vids #49242
znModeratorJim Fadler @jimistlboy
The athleticism, ability to still play flag football is pretty impressive….Bruce and Holt still look pretty damn good.#LegendsOfTheDome
Jeff Zgonina still does not have legs just tree trunks
Thank you so much Dome Personnel, #Rams players and coaches and most of all @IsaacBruce80 for the grand farewell today @DomeLegends
LIVE on #Periscope https://t.co/aRl3q7iZ42
— Jim Fadler (@jimistlboy) July 23, 2016
LIVE on #Periscope: Back to the Legends of the Dome Rams https://t.co/WCdPVDtTyC
— Jim Fadler (@jimistlboy) July 23, 2016
LIVE on #Periscope https://t.co/GYzQXcq6Yz
— Jim Fadler (@jimistlboy) July 23, 2016
Jim Fadler Retweeted
Known this guy 32 years. The definition of class! #domelegends pic.twitter.com/BevZCStANd
— Marc Lillibridge (@NFLBridge) July 23, 2016
July 23, 2016 at 9:43 pm in reply to: 'Legends of the Dome' … with some Jim Fadler periscope vids #49241
znModeratorThank you, @IsaacBruce80. pic.twitter.com/Zpq7Tzqyaf
— The Fast Lane (@101ESPNFastLane) July 23, 2016
znModeratorBut as I age I’ve come to realize that for me labels mean little.
IMO there is far too much “group think” today whether its on the right or the left.
W, to be fair, and eyeball to eyeball over friendly drinks, you’re as into labels as anyone here. And they’re usually accompanied by a pejorative (eg. “extremists”).
I bet we have a lot of common ground though, too. And overlap on a lot of different topics.
When this place is cooking, it makes for very interesting conversations, I think.
znModerator. I think zn has done a bang-up job as sheriff thus far.
Thanks. But I feel more like a corporal.

znModeratorPoured Mike Lansford a couple of drinks the other night and we shot the shit a little. Very cool guy. He hangs with Harrah all the time he said, and they come in on Sundays sometimes to watch all the games. So how ’bout that?
Very cool.
.
znModeratoroff the net from Madam Goldberg
Cooper in the slot. Reverses, double reverses, Cooper passing out of the backfield.
Austin or Cooper running up the middle.
Wait til you all see Cooper.
He is built like a running back.
He will definitely make special teams because he loves to hit on the fly.
I have to think they loved him for his downfield blocking as well.He’s kind of inspirational because fellow players see him hustling and busting his butt.
It rubs off on his teammates.
It will be tough to keep him off the field.
znModeratorMrs. Frontiere’s [team owner Georgia Frontiere] favorite color was powder blue, think UCLA, a color she used to wear all of the time. She thought the Rams would look great in this color and wanted to see some examples. So we made up some powder blue helmets with gold horns and gold helmets with powder blue horns, which she loved. But being someone who was very much into astrology, Mrs. Frontiere agreed to the current color scheme because, actually, she liked the names of the colors we used: new century gold and millennium blue. She thought it made cosmic sense if you will, given the year was 2000.
So the Rams came that close to being the Chargers.
znModeratorUni Watch Profiles: Todd Hewitt
BY PAUL LUKAS, ON MAY 17TH, 2011
As many of you know, the Rams fired longtime equipment manager Todd Hewitt back in January. Today we have an extensive interview with him, but it wasn’t conducted by me. It was done by football historian Robert Harvell, whose photo archives have been featured here on the site many times.
Robert interviewed Todd last month, and the resulting transcript was recently posted over on Helmet Hut. But Robert and Helmet Hut honcho Curtis Worrell both felt that the interview deserved to be published here at Uni Watch as well. After reading it, I wholeheartedly agreed.
As you’ll see, the interview has nothing to do with Todd’s firing. That’s another topic for another day. This is all about the work he did with the Rams, the team’s uniform history, and so on. It’s really good stuff — enjoy.
Robert Harvell: Todd, when did you start working for the Rams?
Todd Hewitt: Well, my dad was hired by the Rams in 1967. I was 11 years old at the time and helped out in the locker room and was a ball boy. In 1978, I was officially hired by the Rams as Assistant Equipment Manager and continued to work with my dad until his retirement in 1984. In 1985, I took over as Rams Equipment Manager, although my dad remained with the team as Equipment Manager Emeritus through 1994, the Rams’ final year in Los Angeles. In 1995, the Rams relocated to St. Louis. My dad joined us there for one final year. So all told, I was with the Rams for 44 years and have worked under 14 different Rams head coaches! Funny, I still remember when the Packers came to town in 1967, my first year with the team. I walked down the Coliseum tunnel flanked by Vince Lombardi and Bart Starr!
RH: How many hours per week would you put in once camp began?
TH: Let’s put it this way: Once camp started I definitely spent more time at work than at home. In at 5am, leave at 7pm, seven days a week. The only day I’d take off during the season is the Sunday of the bye week. The players’ day off was a treat, because I’d “only” work from 5am to 4:30pm. But I made up for that on game day, especially when we returned from road games, often working very late. It wasn’t unusual for me to spend the night at work after road games. During the off-season I typically worked five days a week, from 6am to 4:30pm.
RH: Like most teams, the Rams have changed their uniform color schemes over the years. Do you have a favorite?
TH: Honestly, I like them all. For sentimental reasons, I really like the blue and white. But I would have to say that my favorite color scheme was what we wore from 1973-1999, the blue and yellow, what we wore when we won the Super Bowl. In fact, when we wore those colors again for a throwback game, I realized just how much I missed them, they were just so vibrant. I really like the current uniforms as well, but they are so much darker than what we wore before. When we changed our color scheme in 2000, we actually considered many different possibilities, 15 to 20 combinations or so.
Mrs. Frontiere’s [team owner Georgia Frontiere] favorite color was powder blue, think UCLA, a color she used to wear all of the time. She thought the Rams would look great in this color and wanted to see some examples. So we made up some powder blue helmets with gold horns and gold helmets with powder blue horns, which she loved. But being someone who was very much into astrology, Mrs. Frontiere agreed to the current color scheme because, actually, she liked the names of the colors we used: new century gold and millennium blue. She thought it made cosmic sense if you will, given the year was 2000.
Speaking of Mrs. Frontiere, not many know this because she was very private about it, but she was an extremely generous woman who often helped out many ex-Rams players in their hour of need. She was a wonderful owner and a wonderful person to work for.
RH: Speaking of the Rams’ color schemes, why did the Rams change from blue and yellow to blue and white in 1964, which they wore for nine years, until 1972?
TH: Kind of a funny story. Before the change, the Rams often wore yellow home jerseys, which, as it turned out, didn’t look particularly good on black-and-white TV — a consideration that became increasingly important at the time. So the Rams experimented with different shades of yellow until they found one that actually showed up well on TV. The problem was the shade of the yellow that worked well for TV was called “buttercup yellow.” When Mr. Reeves [Dan Reeves, Rams owner from 1941-1971] found out about that, he said that there was no way his team would ever wear a color called “buttercup yellow.”
Also, the yellow horns on the Rams’ helmet at the time didn’t show up very well on TV either. So Mr. Reeves decided to remove yellow from the uniforms altogether, opting for a simple blue and white, which as it turned out looked great on black and white TV.
RH: Sticking with the Rams’ blue-and-white uniform era, I always wondered why the Rams rarely wore their navy jerseys when playing at home during that time, much like the Dallas Cowboys do today. Did the Rams do this because the white jerseys offered relief when playing under the hot California sun?
TH: Another interesting story. Actually, there were years during the blue-and-white era when the Rams never wore their navy jerseys at all, not during the preseason or the regular season. It had nothing to do with the sun. In fact a lot of those home games we played were quite cool, especially since we played a lot of night games at home. Wearing white jerseys at home was the brainchild of Mr. Reeves, an extremely smart owner and businessman with a talent for promotion. He felt that if the Rams wore their white jerseys at home it would make for a better gameday experience for the fans by giving them a chance to see the colorful jerseys of visiting teams, which most Rams fans would not otherwise get a chance to see. So rather than Rams fans seeing the same thing each and every week, which would be the Rams always in navy and the visiting teams always in white, Rams fans instead got to see different colors each week. And Rams fans loved it — it was a smart decision by Mr. Reeves.
RH: Why did the Rams change back to blue and yellow uniforms in 1973, after wearing blue and white uniforms for nine years?
Screen shot 2011-05-16 at 6.37.04 PM.png
TH: This was Mr. Rosenbloom’s [Caroll Rosenbloom, Rams owner 1972-1979] idea, something he decided to do when he took over as the Rams’ owner in 1972. He felt the blue-and-white uniforms were somewhat bland and wanted a uniform look that better reflected the glitz of Hollywood. Horns were added to the jerseys, at the shoulder area, and we went to white shoes and blue shoes. The new jersey numbers were also pretty snazzy — they had a white trim. But we quickly discovered that the white trim made the numbers very tough to differentiate on TV, so they were scrapped after the 1973 preseason.
RH: So many teams have gone through different helmet designs over the years — not only color but logos as well. Have the Rams ever considered doing away with their helmet horns in favor of another logo?
TH: Never. Not once. The Rams have always been very proud of the horns on their helmet and fully understand how iconic they are and what they represent in terms of NFL history. The Rams’ helmet horns were so important to the Rams that, unlike many other teams, the Rams have always ensured that they were always applied to the helmets even for scrimmages, mini-camps, camps, and practices. You won’t see a Rams player wearing a Rams helmet without horns!
RH: Those horn decals must be a pain to apply. How often are they applied during the course of a year, and how many equipment staffers are involved in applying them?
TH: I imagine they would be a challenge to apply for someone new to it, but I can pretty much do it in my sleep. We actually got to the point of using three different types of horn decals in recent years, because of the different shapes and ventilation holes found on the new helmets. Applying decals to some of these newer helmets is, even for me, a bit of a challenge!
We’d go through about 800 sets of decals per year. Lots of pulling off and applying new ones goes on each year. Although I had a small staff — two full-time assistants and one intern — I’m the only one who’d apply the horn decals. And when my dad was Equipment Manager, he and I were the only ones that applied the decals. So for the last 38 years, from the time the Rams switched from painted horns to decals, only a Hewitt has applied the horns, something I kind of take pride in.
RH: Up until the mid-1970s or so, the Rams were a team that pretty much wore only Riddell helmets and Schutt facemasks. Many other teams of the era wore Riddell helmets as well as helmets made by other manufacturers, and they used facemasks made by other companies as well, such as Dungard. Why didn’t the Rams typically use helmets and facemasks made by other manufacturers?
TH: My dad knew John Riddell, inventor and owner of Riddell helmets, and was always very happy with the helmets he made and the service Riddell provided. He was always very happy with Schutt facemasks as well and the service they provided, plus Schutt was nearby and we could get things from them quickly if needed. My dad was a very loyal person, and when he was taken care of by a supplier like he was by Riddell and Schutt, when a supplier was loyal, my dad always returned the loyalty, always, even when the competition would inevitably try to undercut on prices. That’s just the type of guy my dad was.
In fact, there was a gentleman that did the lettering for our jerseys for many, many years, who always went out of his way to help my dad and the Rams. Bigger, more modern companies would come in and offer slightly lower prices for the lettering, but my dad wouldn’t be swayed, he stuck with our lettering guy.
I’ll never forget when we drafted Dennis Harrah in the first round of 1975. Dennis wore a helmet made by Bike in college, not a Riddell. When he reported to the Rams, he didn’t want a Riddell, couldn’t be talked into one, he wanted a Bike. My dad fretted to no end thinking that he would be letting Riddell down, that he would be disloyal if he purchased a Bike helmet for Dennis. But of course we did get Dennis a Bike helmet. I mean there was no way we were going to put the team in a position where a player got a head injury and it was later discovered that we gave him a helmet he didn’t want, no way. But until Dennis came to the Rams it never really came up, everyone was happy with Riddell. But after Dennis got his Bike, other players wanted one too, especially kids coming out of college where Bike helmets had become very popular.
RH: Did traded players usually want to take/bring their helmets with them to their new teams? How about college players, did they often bring their helmets with them, wanting to continue wearing them in the pros?
TH: Traded vets would sometimes want to take their gear with them to their new team, but more often than not teams could fit them identically as before, so there was usually no need. College players usually don’t bring their equipment with them. In fact, college kids often end up wearing equipment when they reach the pros that they didn’t wear in college. For example, when Sam Bradford arrived, I fitted him with a full girdle pad. Sam said he didn’t want to wear one, that he never wore one in college. I told him that he wasn’t going to be facing Baylor at the pro level! In his first preseason game he was quickly sacked three times or so. He was happy that I fitted him with a full girdle pad.
RH: How many helmets does a player usually go through each season? How many helmets are issued to each player each season, are they issued a backup and a practice helmet?
TH: Players are issued one helmet each year and, except for rare occasions, use it for the entire season. A supply of helmets is kept on hand, in stock, in case a player’s helmet needs to be replaced during the course of the year. Game helmets are the same ones used in practice. During Coach Robinson’s time with the Rams, we used to use two helmet shells for each lineman, one for games and one for practice, because the horn decals on the linemen’s helmets would always get so damaged during practice. In this case, we would simply pull the padding from their game helmet shells and put it into their practice helmet shells, back and forth, throughout the year.
RH: Are players allowed to keep their helmets or uniforms when traded, cut or when they retire?
TH: Always a case-by-case situation. If you have a vet — say Marshall Faulk — then of course the Rams would probably give him whatever he wanted. But if it’s a guy that hasn’t been here long, or a guy that didn’t make the team, then he would most likely have to pay for anything he was interested in taking with him.
RH: How involved, if ever, were coaches, management or ownership in the team’s appearance, what they wore on game day?
TH: As mentioned earlier, Mrs. Frontiere, Mr. Reeves, and Mr. Rosenbloom all offered input. As far as coaches are concerned, one year Coach Malavasi decided that he wanted to wear white jerseys at home — he felt it made the Rams look bigger. But we ended up winning only one or two home games that year, I believe, so that was scratched! Coach Vermeil was concerned about winning games, not about what we wore on game day. Coach Robinson had a thing about comfortable pants, wanted to make sure that we purchased and used the most comfortable pants available. Coach Martz decided to go with the white pants one year (he didn’t like the blue pants), and we got a bunch of calls from fans who loved the white pants, loved the look, wanted us to keep wearing them. They reminded fans of the blue-and-white days, but John Shaw couldn’t stand them. Coach Spagnuolo wanted to make all of the uniform decisions but eventually handed the job off to Steven Jackson and Oshiomogho Otogwe, the team captains.
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RH: What sort of budget were you responsible for as the Rams Equipment Manager?
TH: About half a million dollars per year, which is about $10,000 per player. That includes helmets, pads, uniforms, tape, gum, everything. I took our budget very seriously and in my entire time with the Rams, I never once came in over budget — not an easy thing to do! Helmets, depending on the manufacturer and facemask used, run anywhere from $200 to $500. The new Xenith helmet alone is $450. Shoulder pads can run $350 to $450. Football equipment is expensive!
RH: What would you say was the most important aspect of your job?
TH: First and foremost, player safety. Making sure players are fitted properly with the best equipment available. I always told the young kids that come in that they’re not going to make any money in this league sitting on the bench nursing an injury, that they need to be on the field playing, getting seen and noticed by the coaches. And that it was my job, to help them stay out on the field, not on the bench, and to protect them the best I could by fitting them with the right equipment.
Another important aspect of my job was earning the players’ trust, letting them know that the locker room is their sanctuary and what is said there doesn’t leave, isn’t leaked. It’s important to the players’ morale to know that they have a safe haven and can trust those around them.
And of course there’s also doing what the coaches ask, helping the best I can to make their jobs easier by doing my job well.
RH: Not that you got much of it, but what did you do with your free time?
TH: Spent it all with my wife and kids. I coach my boy’s baseball team. Obviously, my wife is a saint, having put up with the long hours I spent at work. She has pretty much raised our children herself; I missed the birth of one of my sons during an away game. Fortunately, I was able to spend time with my sons, who were able to come to work with me and help out in the locker room, it’s great. My daughter was actually allowed to be the water girl for a few years, which was great and a lot of fun, but that ended a couple of years ago.
RH: What was your favorite part of your job?
TH: The players. And the fact that no two days are the same, always something different going on, always a new challenge, not being chained to a desk. Locker room chemistry, it can be incredible. The Greatest Show on Turf years were awesome in the locker room and on the practice field. Everyone wanted to be there, everyone couldn’t wait to go to work. Practices were awesome, so fast, there were many days when the ball never hit the ground, just unbelievable. The friendships. I’m great friends with Vince [Ferragamo], Irv [Pankey], Dennis [Harrah] and Jack [Youngblood] to name a few. Fifty Rams players and wives attended my wedding, just awesome.
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Let’s have a tip of the sideline cap to Robert Harvell for conducting such a great interview, to Helmet Hut’s Curtis Worrell for generously sharing the interview with Uni Watch, and of course to Todd Hewitt for all the great stories and information.
And there’s more: Very soon (possibly as soon as tomorrow) we’ll have an interview with Todd’s dad, Don Hewitt.
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znModeratorI believe in Elizabeth Warren when she says we have to get beyond the past and do everything necessary to insure that Trump does not become our President.
I believe myself when I say that tolerating party corruption is never acceptable.
July 23, 2016 at 5:35 am in reply to: Rams' first camp back in Cal will feature battles at QB, receiver & secondary #49182
znModeratorCountdown to Camp – Wide Receivers
Myles Simmons
With the Rams now eight days away from training camp, we continue our Countdown to Camp series by taking a look at the team’s wide receivers. Be sure to submit your question about tomorrow’s position group, cornerbacks, on Twitter, Facebook, or in the comments below.
WIDE RECEIVERS
Newcomers: Pharoh Cooper, Mike Thomas, Paul McRoberts, Marquez North, Nelson Spruce, Duke Williams
If there’s a clear area in which the Rams must improve to be competitive in 2016, it’s the club’s passing game.
Los Angeles did plenty to address the unit over the course of the offseason, beginning with promoting Rob Boras to offensive coordinator and hiring Mike Groh to be the team’s passing game coordinator and wide receivers coach.
Just by observing OTAs, there’s a clear difference in the way Groh runs his drills. He heavily focuses on precise route running and making contested catches. Building that kind of foundation in the offseason program should help the Rams once Week 1 rolls around.
But when it comes to players, head coach Jeff Fisher said at the start of OTAs that Tavon Austin could be headed for a stellar season. With the revamped offense, Fisher told therams.com Austin has a chance to double his catches.
Austin racked up 1,187 all-purpose yards last season and 10 total touchdowns between his receptions, rushes, and punt returns. Heading into his fourth year, he’s mentioned wanting to become more of a vocal leader.
Kenny Britt returns for his third season with the Rams, also an incumbent starter. Still recovering from offseason surgery, he went through rehab drills on the side for much of OTAs. But Fisher said in June he expects everyone to be able to participate once camp begins, which signals good news for Britt.
Last year, the Rutgers product finished No. 2 with 18.9 yards per reception. But he and the offense would undoubtedly like to increase overall production.
Having completed his four-year rookie contract, Brian Quick re-signed with the Rams on a one-year deal in March. Last year, the wideout had to go through the offseason rehabbing his surgically-repaired shoulder, which likely affected his production. Being further removed from the recovery process could help him make an impact offensively in 2016.
Second-year wide receiver Bradley Marquez was mainly a special teams contributor as a rookie, having made the initial 53-man roster as a undrafted free agent. But he also showed strong receiving ability and made his way into the rotation later in the year, making 13 receptions for 88 yards. He continued flashing his good hands during OTAs, and could work his way up the wideout depth chart with more strong performances in the preseason.
As for the rookies, fourth-round pick Pharoh Cooper looked like he belonged during OTAs. He earned reps with the starting unit and made the most of them, showing quickness and explosiveness from the slot. He’s also the type of player who enjoys physicality, which means he may stand out even more once pads come on. Fisher said Cooper has the potential to become a household name. That may happen sooner rather than later if the South Carolina product has an outstanding camp.
Sixth rounder Mike Thomas looked a bit raw at times during OTAs, but his big-play ability is apparent just from watching him. He will likely have to contribute on special teams to make an impact as a rookie.
Others in the mix include Deon Long — who spent time on the Rams’ practice squad last year — and UDFAs Marquez North (Tennessee), Paul McRoberts (Southeast Missouri State), Nelson Spruce (Colorado), and Duke Williams (Auburn). Spruce is the Pac 12 all-time leader in receptions. He’s also a local, having graduated from Westlake High School.
Also of note, Stedman Bailey, who was placed on the non-football injury list in June, has elected to go back to West Virginia to complete his degree and serve as a student assistant coach.
QUESTION OF THE DAY
@MylesASimmons Duke Williams, Michael Thomas, or Nelson Spruce. Who claims a roster spot/who goes to the practice squad? #CountdownToCamp
— SeattleRams (@seattlerams_nfl) July 21, 2016
At this point, it’s kind of hard to predict who will be on the roster and practice squad, simply because we haven’t seen them in pads yet.That said, between those three, I would give Thomas an edge for the 53-man roster, if for no other reason than he was a draft pick. And as mentioned earlier, Thomas has nice big-play ability that should come in handy sooner or later so long as he picks up the offense well.
Spruce did really impress me in OTAs, as it seemed like he reeled in every catchable pass thrown his way. If there’s a knock on him, it’s that he hasn’t played much special teams. If you’re going to make the 53-man roster as a UDFA, that’s how you’ll need to contribute. But having him on the practice squad could be valuable as a depth piece.
As for Williams, I think it’s important to remember he came in as a tryout player — not even in the initial class of undrafted free agents. If he were to make the practice squad, that would be a significant accomplishment.
We’ll see how it shakes out during camp and the preseason games.
Thanks for your question, Rob. If you’ve got a Q about our next group up, cornerbacks, be sure to send it along via Twitter, Facebook, or in the comments below. We’ll be back tomorrow to discuss the position led by the franchise tagged Trumaine Johnson.
July 23, 2016 at 1:06 am in reply to: audio: Marc Bulger on playing with such good WRs & taking over from Kurt #49180
znModeratorHe didn’t realize he was playing on a broken leg in his final game of 2009, the ARZ game. He knew his leg was bad during the game but then they found out afterward it was broken
That’s wrong.
He played on a broken leg for THREE games.

My final year (in St. Louis), the reason I stopped was because my leg was broken,” Bulger said. “I played three games with a broken leg, I didn’t even know it.
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