Rams finally won one; can they do it again?

  • Print

ST. LOUIS (AP)—No question, the St. Louis Rams deserve to be 1-7. So far, they’ve proven only that they can beat another really bad team.

To match or—gasp—top last year’s 2-14 record, they know they’ll have to step it up.

“We’ve just got to keep plugging away,” rookie head coach Steve Spagnuolo said during the bye week. “We’re going to play some good teams, and hopefully we’ll be playing some good football, too.”

The second half of the schedule is not nearly as daunting as the first eight games, even for a franchise that’s a sorry 6-34 the last three seasons. The Rams played their first two games on the road and four of the first six, the basic recipe for a staggering start.

They’ll no doubt be double-digit underdogs at home the first game back against the unbeaten Saints. But overall, the last eight opponents are a combined 30-27, and Seattle (2-5) Nov. 29 at home and Tennessee (1-6) on the road Dec. 13 appear to represent opportunity.

Maybe it’s just the euphoria of Sunday’s 17-10 victory at Detroit, but players seemed genuinely optimistic about their chances of not embarrassing themselves the rest of the way.

“I tell people that this should be the first win of many,” center Jason Brown(notes) said. “It was a long time coming, but we’ve been working extremely hard, and although the win total might not show it, we feel we’re improving.”

As the numbers show across the board, they’ve got far to go. The Rams are last in the NFL in scoring and 29th in points allowed, last in third-down defense, among the worst with a minus-7 turnover differential.

Check almost any category and they’re at or near the bottom. The box office, too, where they’ll have to scramble to sell out the five remaining home games.

And yet, a few plays that go the other way and they enter the bye 3-5. Two weeks ago they squandered the lead late in the fourth quarter at Jacksonville and lost in overtime, and they outplayed the Redskins in a 9-7 Week 4 loss, also on the road. They were in a scoreless tie at halftime at Seattle in the opener before everything fell apart in a 28-0 setback.

Three turnovers inside the Minnesota 10 kept the Rams from at least keeping it close in a 38-10 home loss to the Vikings in Week 5.

“It was a rough road,” Spagnuolo said. “Let’s face it.”

A productive run game led by bruising Steven Jackson makes the Rams at least a bit dangerous. The 235-pounder is tied for the NFC rushing lead with the Vikings’ Adrian Peterson, lacking 216 yards for his fifth straight 1,000-yard season, and trails Peterson by 3 yards for the NFL lead in yards from scrimmage.

He’s coming off one of his best games, dragging Lions would-be tacklers for 149 yards on 22 carries and scoring the winning TD on a late 25-yard jaunt last Sunday.

The Rams spent a lot of money on the offensive line, signing Brown to a free-agent deal and drafting tackle Jason Smith(notes) with the second overall pick, and it’s starting to pay off.

“You can see the guys are growing, especially the rookie,” Jackson said. “He did an awesome job, and it’s definitely something we can grow on.”

Deficiencies at quarterback, wide receiver, defensive line and secondary will keep the margin for error paper thin.

Throwing to a cast of no-names, Bulger has more interceptions (4) than touchdown passes (3) and has been settling for short tosses too much, perhaps beaten down a bit by all the losing.

Two defensive linemen are on injured reserve and top cornerback Ron Bartell(notes) has lacked top speed for several weeks due to a lingering groin injury that brings pain with every step. End Chris Long(notes), the second pick of the 2008 draft, leads the line in tackles and finally got his first sack of the season last week.

The Rams have appeared reluctant to dial up too many blitzes to perhaps even the playing field.

Coaches spent a good deal of the bye week self-scouting, although Spagnuolo doesn’t anticipate big changes in scheme or personnel after the break.

“If you go too far, you just confuse the guys,” he said. “You don’t want to do that. We’ve laid a foundation and we’ll just try to get better at it.”

Long before it started, Spagnuolo knew this would be a tough season. The Rams are in a difficult rebuilding phase after mistakes by the past regime led to salary cap issues that prompted them to cut ties with several veterans. The coach has been relentlessly upbeat, consistently looks forward rather than revisiting bonehead plays in detail. After beating the Lions, appreciative players rewarded Spagnuolo with the game ball.

“It’s good to see everyone smiling,” said rookie middle linebacker James Laurinaitis(notes), among the bright spots the first half. “The first thing Spags told us is that’s what it’s supposed to feel.”

When will they get that feeling again?

“Certainly, we’re not accepting losing, but we’ve got to treat every week the same and start to turn some of these moral victories into real victories,” Long said. “When we do that, we’ll be a lot happier.”

Updated Nov 7, 12:05 am EST
digg del.icio.us
more

6 Comments

Post a Comment
  1. john
    6. Posted by john Mon Nov 9 9:26pm EST

    Report Abuse

    Big Bob, are you even a fan? Why are you on here? Who in their right mind would think in all the years of first team changes especially HC would even consider that the team would be competitive? Are you even cognitive or are you one of those people who are only happy when they are complaining? Like most people who are soooo wanting it right now like babies with candy, are you even a little bit mature? Get a reality check! Stop living in LALA land!! The Rams will win again, just a matter of time! When did you become a expert commentator overnight? You first had to learn how to read and comprehend which is debatable. Then you had to learn how to write or type in this case, learn how to form sentences, see your first football game before making an opinion, See more football games before you could learn about how to win if you do, learn the computer to get on the internet, read the news on the Rams and get on here to form an opinion! Not all of it, but you get my drift, I hope! Time, my man, it takes time! Go Rams!!!
  2. Lakerdad
    5. Posted by Lakerdad Mon Nov 9 6:41pm EST

    Report Abuse

    My vote is to pick up either Badford or McCoy or any QB coming out, I just can't stomach Bulger any longer. We need new blood under center, someone that has the will to win. I can't take Bulger's non winning attitude. My 2 cents!
  3. jr1
    4. Posted by jr1 Sun Nov 8 8:14pm EST

    Report Abuse

    The changes to the OL are promising. With Brown anchoring at center, Incognito finally got the message that his bonehead ways will lead to the door. He's been playing better. Smith will be fine, and even Barron is better. The OL has turned a small corner and will be a strength. You can see it in Steven Jackson's production.

    They need to get big and nasty on the DL fast, and find Leonard Little's replacement. They also need a couple of crunchers at LB to complement Laurinatis. That's the way to help the secondary. Slam the run and hurry the QB.

    I'd worry about replacing Bulger after next year, not in the next draft as there is no QB "lock" in the bunch to be an NFL success. Every QB coming out will be a significant risk. Go with shoring up the defense where there is a lot of talent available in the first 3-4 rounds.

    If you can add a decent FA receiver, then Bulger would have him, Laurent Robinson and Avery to throw to next year, and the results would certainly be better than now.

    The Rams could be interesting in 2011 if they get bigger and meaner on D, and get these games closer. I'm not suggesting a playoff run, but middle of the pack would look pretty good when you consider where we are now.
  4. tom b
    3. Posted by tom b Sun Nov 8 7:15am EST

    Report Abuse

    If the rams get the first pick and choose a qb they will regret it. i have watched a lot of the qb's in college and that's just it. they are good college qb's not and i repeat not going to be good nfl qbs. there is a defensive tackle from nebraska named suh. the dude is a monster and will solidify the interior of the dl for years and is also the best player in next years draft. the rams need to pick the best players not reaching like they have over the last 10 years. that's what put them in the hole they are now in.
  5. Rick
    2. Posted by Rick Sat Nov 7 8:39am EST

    Report Abuse

    Agreed Big Bob. except for 1 thing. they will remain in st louis get 1st pic in the draft and better get either bradford or mccoy. then next year they will start bumping up the wins a lil better. Now i know the qb is by far not gonna solve all their problems but when we can get sorry as bulger who don't give a @#$% out then it starts looking better
  6. Big Bob
    1. Posted by Big Bob Sat Nov 7 7:38am EST

    Report Abuse

    Schedule is to tough for a bad team. They end up 1-15, # 1 draft pick (which they will screw up again), and then eventually move back to the land of fruits & nuts in LA. Good riddance.
Sign in to post a comment, or sign up for a free account

Video Spotlight