Tuesday, June 2, 2009

As sale looms, Rams fans can do their part

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
If the Rams eventually move from St. Louis, it won't be because of the fans.
The customers have stayed loyal during hard times, buying up about 95 percent
of the seats at the Edward Jones Dome over the last two seasons. That's
outstanding support for a team that has won only five of the last 32 games.

With the franchise for sale, which opens up all sorts of possibilities, the
best thing Rams fans can do is stick by the team and continue to attend games
until help arrives.

That way, no Rams owner will have an excuse to pull the team out of here
because of a lack of support. And with sellout crowds filing into home games,
perhaps this will rally the business community and motivate potential buyers
from the St. Louis area.

There's no reason for fans to get mad or to boycott, just because owners Chip
Rosenbloom and Lucia Rodriguez have decided to sell. Yes, this happened faster
than I had anticipated, but I'm in no position to understand the financial
pressures (taxes) that confront brother and sister as they settle the estate of
their late mother, Georgia Frontiere.

Rosenbloom was always straightforward about his vision. He never denied that he
would sell the team at some point. But rather than sell immediately after
Frontiere's death, Rosenbloom and Rodriguez took time to reorganize the Rams'
front office and football operations. They've installed new leadership in both
areas, and it was the necessary first step of a massive rebuilding project.

Rosenbloom has said often that he wanted to keep the Rams for as long as he
could, but he never put a timetable on it. He didn't actively shop the Rams in
his first year as the managing partner but volunteered that he'd sell if the
right buyer emerged. And that buyer profile included a willingness to keep the
Rams here.

To that end, Rosenbloom gave an individual or group in St. Louis the first shot
at buying the team. Rosenbloom held off interested parties from outside St.
Louis; he hoped that a St. Louis bidder would make an offer.

But it's not happening. And after waiting in vain for more than a year,
Rosenbloom has enlisted the Goldman Sachs investment banking firm to find a
buyer.

I've received some e-mails ripping Rosenbloom for not sticking with the Rams
for as long as it takes to find a St. Louis-based owner.

What do you expect him to do, take hostages at the next Civic Progress meeting
and force St. Louis corporate titans to buy the Rams?

If no local interest materializes, then the decision has been made for
Rosenbloom. If no financial players from our area think it's worthwhile to buy
60 percent of the Rams to preserve the team for St. Louis — well, there's not
much more to say, is there?

St. Louis leadership still has time to prepare a pitch, but no ZIP codes will
be barred from bidding on the Rams now. It's possible for a Los Angeles
billionaire to swoop in and make an offer that Rosenbloom can't refuse. The
other reality is that a new owner will probably be able to take the team out of
St. Louis after the 2014 season.

But this hasn't changed: Rosenbloom wants to sell to owners who want to keep
the franchise here and work on a long-range stadium plan.

OK, here's what I don't understand:

St. Louis fans love their sports. We're passionate about the Cardinals, Rams
and Blues, who receive tremendous support. You can make the case — sadly, in a
way — that this is the thing we do best. There are problems all over the
metropolitan area, and all sorts of people out of work or suffering in a bad
economy, but we keep showing up en masse to Busch Stadium, the Edward Jones
Dome and the Scottrade Center. You can count on STL fans to give you their
money, their loyalty.

So why is it that the owners of St. Louis professional sports teams are based
in other cities and regions? Bill DeWitt (Cardinals) lives in Cincinnati; Dave
Checketts (Blues) splits his time between Utah and Connecticut; and Rosenbloom
and Rodriguez live in LA.

With St. Louis thriving as a sports town, and with our sports teams serving as
a big source of pride and positive identification for our city, why can't we
get a St. Louisan to actually own one of the teams?

It just seems bizarre to me. For more than a year, Rosenbloom has all but
begged for a St. Louis investor or group to make him an offer for the 60
percent share of the Rams, and this is what he hears in response:

(Crickets chirping) ...

That's why I hope that the great fans of St. Louis continue to pack The Ed for
the Rams in 2009. That's how you can do your part until a new local owner rides
to the rescue.

And a new local owner will ride to the rescue, right?

(Crickets chirping) ...

Hello?

Rescue time!

(Crickets chirping) ...

Do you know that the Rams could move to LA?

Anybody there?

(Crickets chirping) ...

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

The Rams Revolution


The Rams’ release of starting linebacker Pisa Tinoisamoa underscored the dramatic nature of the Rams’ roster shakeup that’s occured this offseason.

Of the players who were listed on the roster or on injured reserve for the 16th and final game of the Rams’ 2008 season, 21 are gone.

And the Rams have gotten a lot younger during this weeding process.

Counting those who finished last season on IR, the Rams have subsequently released, traded or declined to re-sign 15 players who were age 30 or older.

That’s right, 15 thirtysomethings are gone from 2008.

That list includes Torry Holt, Orlando Pace, Drew Bennett, Trent Green, La Roi Glover, Fakhir Brown, Corey Chavous and Jonathan Craft. Several full-time starters were part of that group.

As the 2009 roster sits right now, the Rams have only six players age 30 or over: QB Marc Bulger; DEs James Hall and Leonard Little; LB Chris Draft; S Todd Johnson; and K Josh Brown. Two others — snapper Chris Massey and TE Randy McMichael – will turn 30 during the 2009 season.

That’s why Tinoisamoa was let go. He was decent enough, but wasn’t going to get any better. He was limited by size. GM Billy Devaney and coach Steve Spagnuolo would rather see what some of the young LBs could do, whether it be Larry Grant, Chris Chamberlain or David Vobora.

I think the Rams could get even younger before the 2009 regular-season opener. The Rams lack depth at DE, so Little and Hall appear to be safe. The same with Draft at LB. But obviously Devaney and Spagnuolo are on the lookout for younger plug-ins and upgrades at the position. All positions, actually. They want to freshen up this roster, and make it faster and stronger and more energetic.

Some younger veterans aren’t locks to be playing for the Rams in ‘09. TE Joe Klopfenstein is a longshot to make it to the opener, and at some point CB Tye Hill, the former No. 1 draft pick, will have to show that he can stay healthy and make plays.

If he has another poor season, Bulger could be a salary-cap casualty after ‘09.

If you are a Ram age 30 or older or in your late 20s, watch out … the bosses are probably looking to replace you unless you’re playing very well and on a consistent basis.

And this needed to be done. When a team has lost 27 of its last 32 games, a good scrubbing and aggressive housecleaning is in order. I don’t believe I’m not overstating the Devaney-Spags desire to go with the youngbloods. A perfect example is the wide receiver position. The Rams are going with the kids. They’ve had no interest, so far, in signing one of the elder-statesmen WR who could tutor their young receivers. The Rams’ three top wideouts on the depth chart right now — Donnie Avery, Laurent Robinson and Keenan Burton — have combined for 19 NFL starts and 103 NFL receptions in their careers.

That’s why I think it’s wise and fair to be realistic about the Rams’ 2009 season. This will be a young bunch, led by a rookie HC. This roster overhaul was a necessity. Sometimes you have to take take a step back before you can move forward and begin to ascend. It will be exciting to watch them grow up, but there are still a lot of roster holes, and a lot to learn.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Rams INside Slant

When the Rams’ minicamp opened on April 2, it was expected that quarterback Gus Frerotte would be on the field as the backup to Marc Bulger.


But minicamp came and went without Frerotte, and within a few hours after the final practice was over, the Rams had their new backup. But it wasn’t Frerotte. Instead, it was Kyle Boller, who quietly had a tryout April 3 and signed a one-year contract the next day.


Boller was Baltimore’s first-round pick in 2003, and during an inconsistent career with the Ravens, he started 42 games, played in 53, passed for 7,846 yards with 45 touchdowns and 44 interceptions. He spent all of the 2008 season on injured reserve with an injury to his throwing shoulder.



The injury was a partially torn labrum, and after it happened in the preseason, he opted to have surgery immediately. He was throwing by the end of the season and now proclaims the shoulder to be “100 percent.”


Boller had an anchor put in his shoulder, similar to the surgery New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees had in 2006.


Boller told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “It’s one of those deals where I feel very confident that the surgeon that did it, did it fine. I was talking to Drew Brees because he’s one of the guys I work out with in San Diego and he told me he had 10 anchors put in his shoulder and I only had one so if he can come back from that, I’m sure I’ll be just fine.”


“One of the things is you work so much shoulder strengthening that my arm actually feels stronger than it did before just by all the rotator cuff stuff you do and working your biceps tendon so it does feel stronger.”


Said general manager Billy Devaney, “We think he’s a good fit for us backing up Marc. He’s a young guy that still has a ton of ability and a lot of upside. This is a really good pickup for us.”


Boller’s arrival had some irony because of comments center Jason Brown made after signing with the Rams early in free agency. Talking about the importance of protecting the quarterback, the former Baltimore center said, “That relationship between the quarterback and the offensive line, it’s more important than what people think because we give that guy confidence. Kyle Boller with the Ravens, I love him to death, but you see what getting hit one too many times early in your career can do to you.


“He became gun shy instead of getting the ball and standing back there with poise and then being able to step up. If there was a flash of anything, something, it might have been far to the edge, he was like (flinching). And he started to scramble. You have to have the faith in your offensive line to where you say, ‘Hey, I know these guys are going to give me the seconds that I need in order to get this ball off.’ “


Boller acknowledged he was disappointed when he heard what Brown said, and added that Brown “was surprised to see me” when he showed up for his tryout.


But, Boller said, “I talked to Jason. I’ve been with Jason for the last four years, and I don’t have a bad thing to say about him. I think if you talked to him, we’ve never had any problems. So we cleared that up right away. It wasn’t a big issue at all.”


Asked about the “gun-shy” accusation, and whether it was accurate, Boller said, “No. I don’t think so at all. I’ve never had anybody tell me I was gun-shy before. I’m not afraid to go back there and throw that thing.”


What Boller is most excited about is getting a new opportunity and working in the West Coast offense being implemented by offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur.


“(It’s) an offense I have always wanted to be in,” he said. “You get the ball out of your hand fast, run the football and get your downfield shots. It’s something I am excited about. Coach Shurmur said this was an offense he thought I would thrive in. I’m looking forward to picking his brain and trying to learn as much as I can from him and go from there.”


As for the new beginning, Boller concluded, “I’m ready for a fresh start. I could’ve gone back to Baltimore. But with the situation and stuff, I was just ready to get out of there. I was ready for a clean start, new faces, new places - everything.


“It’s a tough business and there’s a lot of stuff you have to go through but I think that’s what separates guys that make it and have long careers and guys that don’t. You have to be mentally strong; a huge part of it is the mental part. If you let the little things scare you and bother you, you don’t have a chance. I was thrown in early, learned my lessons and hopefully my next 10 years will be the best years of my football career.”


Notes, Quotes

• When Rams general manager Billy Devaney was with the Falcons in 2007, they drafted WR Laurent Robinson in the third round. As a rookie, the 6-2, 194-pound Robinson started six games and caught 37 passes for 437 yards and a touchdown.


However, hamstring problems affected him last season, and he played just six games and had 52 yards on five receptions. He was placed on injured reserve Dec. 16.


Robinson has rejoined Devaney as the Rams and Falcons swapped fifth- and sixth-round picks. The Rams moved down 22 spots in the fifth round and 20 in the sixth round to acquire Robinson.


“He showed a lot of potential his rookie year,” Devaney said. “Good ball skills, smooth route runner. He’s got some size, too.”


• There was a strange disconnect between coach Steve Spagnuolo and general manager Billy Devaney when the team’s recent minicamp ended.


Asked if the five practices assisted the evaluation process when it comes to draft plans, Spagnuolo said, “Yeah, no question. And that was one of the reasons why Billy and I decided to have a camp before the draft. I think that will be huge. It will be huge for him; I think it’ll be huge for me. It’s important.”


However, Devaney had a different take. Asked how much the minicamp helped the draft plan, he said, “Not much. We’re not going to alter our draft board based on what we see out here, guys kind of running around in shorts and t-shirts. That wasn’t the intent. We didn’t think going in that with these couple of practices we’d find out about guys and say, ‘OK, you know what? Forget about drafting this position, we need to move on to this position based off the practices.’ It was more just to get our feet wet with the players and coaches and really has no effect on the draft.”


• Last summer, coach Scott Linehan moved the team’s training camp from St. Louis to Wisconsin in hopes of turning things around from a 3-13 record in 2007. Running back Steven Jackson was absent because of a contract impasse, and the Rams sputtered out of the gate. Linehan was fired after the fourth game of the season, and the Rams finished 2-14.


As it turns out, Spagnuolo was hoping to have the first part of camp away from the team’s training facility, just not as far away as Wisconsin. While with the Eagles, the team trained in nearby West Chester, and with the Giants, camp was held in Albany.


After investigating options at Lindenwood University, Southern Illinois-Edwardsville and Southern Illinois-Carbondale, the decision was made this week to hold camp at their Russell Training Facility.


However, efforts will be ongoing to see if a move makes sense in 2010. Logistics made it difficult to go somewhere this year.


“We looked at and considered a lot of different options,” Spagnuolo said. “And ultimately, we decided that for this year and this summer, this was the best place for us and our fans.”


Added Kevin Demoff, the team’s executive vice president of football operations, “In the end, we just felt that this was the most practical option for 2009, from a football standpoint and also from a fan standpoint.


“Nobody had ever really taken the time to research local options, at least not in the past few years. It’s possible in 2010 we could go elsewhere. But in the end, all of our research this year led us to want to stay here.”


Part of the problem involved camp starting later than normal this year and bumping into the time when students arrive on the various campuses.


As Demoff further explained to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “By the time we started seeking out schools, it was a little late in the process for them to be able to commit. This will give everybody lead time of a year to really give us a proposal that makes sense. And for us to consider what makes sense.


“But, we’d also like to see how it plays out here … and really get a sense for how fans react to practice here, and the advantages that come with that.”


When the Rams camped at home from 2005-2008, night practices were closed. In addition, the facility isn’t equipped to handle large crowds. It’s possible a scrimmage will be held at either Lindenwood or Washington University.


Concluded Demoff, “Our goal is to make as many practices as possible open to the public, if not all practices.”


• Added to the list of draft eligible players expected to visit the Rams next week are OTs Eugene Monroe (Virginia), Michael Oher (Mississippi) and William Beatty (Connecticut).


Others known to be visiting are OT Jason Smith (Baylor), WRs Michael Crabtree (Texas Tech), Darrius Heyward-Bey (Maryland), Jeremy Maclin (Missouri) and Hakeem Nicks and Brandon Tate (both North Carolina); QBs Thomas Brandstater (Fresno State) and Mark Sanchez (Southern Cal); LBs Aaron Curry (Wake Forest) and Rey Maualuga (Southern Cal); DT Ziggy Hood (Missouri); CB Mike Mickens (Cincinnati); DE Tyson Jackson (Louisiana State); DEs Connor Barwin (Cincinnati) and Lawrence Sidbury (Richmond).


Quote To Note: “They’re very detail oriented. Very team oriented. I’m glad to be a part of it. I’m going to put my best foot forward and show ‘em I’ve bought in.”—DT Clifton Ryan on Steve Spagnuolo and the Rams’ new coaching staff.


Strategy And Personnel

TEAM NEEDS/OFFSEASON STRATEGY


The Rams have made some key additions, but there were holes created with the release of tackle Orlando Pace, wide receivers Torry Holt and Drew Bennett, backup quarterback Trent Green and blocking tight end Anthony Becht.


The departures of Pace and Holt created $14 million in salary-cap space, which the Rams used some of for quarterback Kyle Boller. They also could possibly add depth at defensive tackle and running back. The draft could also be used for those spots, including wide receiver, where Laurent Robinson was acquired from the Falcons. They will need about $6 million in cap space for their draft picks.


Coach Steve Spagnuolo would like to get bigger on the defensive line, where the Rams ended 2008 without a nose tackle behind starter Clifton Ryan.


The draft could also be the place where the Rams find a back capable of taking over for Steven Jackson during games or if is injured, which has been the case the last two seasons.


TEAM NEEDS


1. Tackle: With left tackle Orlando Pace having been released and Alex Barron entering the final year of his contract, a revamping of the position is possible. In the short term, the Rams plan to move Barron from right tackle to left tackle, the position he played in college and for 15 games in 2007 when Pace was injured. That still leaves a void on the right side, where Adam Goldberg worked in the team’s recent minicamp.


2. Wide receiver: With Torry Holt and Drew Bennett released, there is no real veteran presence at the position. Donnie Avery and Keenan Burton return for their second season, and it’s possible the Rams could add a receiver in free agency while still going for another young player in the draft. They did add third-year pro Laurent Robinson in a trade with Atlanta.


3. Middle linebacker: Will Witherspoon is moving from the middle to the outside where it is believed he will be able to excel. For now, Chris Draft is the starter, but he is not a long-term answer. The Rams have been looking for excellence in the middle ever since London Fletcher left after the 2001 season.


Medical Watch: No updates.


FRANCHISE PLAYER: S Oshiomogho Atogwe: Tendered at $6.342M.

TRANSITION PLAYER: None.

UNRESTRICTED FREE AGENTS


• CB Fakhir Brown was a favorite of former coach Jim Haslett, and is not expected to return.


• CB Jason Craft was acquired during the 2008 season and made some valuable contributions. Could be back at the right price.


• OT Anthony Davis didn’t play after being signed during the season, but might be back to compete for depth.


• DT La’Roi Glover played with a bad knee for most of the second half of the season and is contemplating retirement.


• OT Brandon Gorin missed the entire 2008 season with a shoulder injury and is unlikely to return.


• WR/KR Dante Hall has experienced leg injuries the last two seasons, and his age is catching up to him.


• WR Dane Looker has always gotten the most out of his ability, but coaching change might means it’s the end of the line for him.


• CB Ricky Manning played five games before going on injured reserve, but could compete for a spot if recovered from his injury.


• RB Travis Minor has contributed on special teams, but it seems to be a longshot that he’ll be re-signed.


• OT Rob Petitti never made it to training camp after being injured in offseason workouts. Very unlikely to be back.


• LB Gary Stills added leadership to the special teams before being slowed by a knee injury. It’s unknown how the new coaching staff views him.


• C Cory Withrow is another undersized lineman added to the roster because of injuries. Not expected to be re-signed.

RESTRICTED FREE AGENTS


• DE Victor Adeyanju (tendered at $1.01M with fourth-round pick as compensation) has showed steady progress in his three seasons, and he is needed for depth on the line.


• OG Richie Incognito (tendered at $1.01M with third-round pick as compensation) has ability, but has to curb his emotions during games. The question is whether he’s worth a $1 million tender.

EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS FREE AGENTS: None.

PLAYERS RE-SIGNED


• CB Ron Bartell: UFA; $25M/4 yrs, $4.1M SB/$8.6M base guarantees; 2009 cap: $5.35M.


• QB Brock Berlin: Potential ERFA; 1 yr, terms unknown.


• LB Quinton Culberson: Potential ERFA; 1 yr, terms unknown.


• T/G Adam Goldberg: UFA; $1.52M/2 yrs, $100,000 SB; 2009 cap: $670,000.


• DE Eric Moore: UFA; terms unknown.


• OG Mark Setterstrom: Not tendered as RFA; terms unknown.

PLAYERS ACQUIRED


• TE Billy Bajema: UFA 49ers; terms unknown.


• QB Kyle Boller: UFA Ravens; $1.5M/1 yr.


• C Jason Brown: UFA Ravens; $37.5M/5 yrs, $11M SB/$9M base guarantees; 2009 cap: $6.2M.


• SS James Butler: UFA Giants; $12M/4 yrs, $1.075M SB; 2009 cap: $2.194M.


• S Craig Dahl: Not tendered as ERFA by Giants; terms unknown.


• FB Mike Karney: FA Saints; $3.5M/3 yrs, $275,000 SB/$225,000 RB; 2009 cap: $1.017M.


• WR Laurent Robinson (trade Falcons).

PLAYERS LOST


• TE Anthony Becht (released).


• WR Drew Bennett (released).


• S Corey Chavous (released).


• QB Trent Green (released/failed physical).


• WR Torry Holt (released).


• C Nick Leckey: UFA Saints; 1 yr, terms unknown.


• OT Orlando Pace (released).


• C Brett Romberg: UFA Falcons; terms unknown.