Comparing Today’s St Louis Rams To The 2009 Version

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RamBill

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Comparing Today’s St Louis Rams To The 2009 Version
by Julian Felice

http://ramblinfan.com/2014/05/24/comparing-todays-st-louis-rams-2009-version/

It was the worst of times. As dreadful as the St Louis Rams have been over the past decade, the nadir of this period – and of the history of the franchise – was the disastrous 2009 season. With only one win in Steve Spagnuolo’s first season as head coach, the Rams hit rock-bottom with the worst record in the League. Terrible coaching and awful execution made the team a laughing stock and drove fans to despair. Good days.

Fast-forward five years and the Rams seem on the brink of finally regaining some semblance of dignity as contenders in the National Football League. But, with so much hope and expectation on such young shoulders, how do today’s Rams compare to the team that plunged Rams Nation into depths normally reserved for Browns fans?

The starting quarterback at the time was Marc Bulger. A plucky over-achiever and one-time crowd-favorite, Bulger was clearly in the decline of his career and ended the year on Injured Reserve, with Kyle Boller and Keith Null taking the reins, neither of them with much success. Bulger’s Week 9 appearance against Arizona was his last as a Ram, and he was let go in the off-season, sadly failing to see the field again. However polarizing a figure he might be, Bulger’s eventual replacement – Sam Bradford, whom the Rams drafted with the first overall pick that was the reward for their catastrophic season – is clearly a more natural talent with more significant experience following his days at Oklahoma. Bradford may also be inconsistent and might not have delivered on his potential, but he is undoubtedly better placed to lead a franchise than his predecessor.

Of course, Bulger’s falloff may have had much to do with the fact that he had spent most of his last few years running for his life behind a leaky offensive line that comprised Alex Barron and his false starts, Richie Incognito and his anger management issues, backup-caliber Adam Golberg, and Jason Brown and Jacob Bell, the latest in a string of over-paid, under-achieving free agents (more on those later!). This was a horrific motley crew of offensive linemen that are easily outmatched by the current crop, little aided by first round pick Jason Smith, who spent more of the season injured before going on to achieving next to nothing.

As for receivers, the Rams’ starters were oft-injured Donnie Avery and rookie Brandon Gibson, with occasional contributions from Laurent Robinson, the memorable Keenan Burton, and a yet-to-blossom Danny Amendola. Randy McMichael was the starting tight end (remember what I said earlier about free agents?), while Mike Karney was, perhaps, the Rams’ last true fullback. And while today’s receivers and tight ends might be under-performing, they are certainly no worse than this lot, with ten more touchdowns between them last season.

But carrying the load of the offense, of course, was running back Steven Jackson. 39 carried the ball for over 1,400 yards that season as he continued to put his body on the line for a sake of a moribund franchise. It was Jackson’s continued efforts to make the offense relevant that made him every fan’s favorite and will ensure him a perennial place in Rams Nation’s affections.

The defense was not much better. A fading Leonard Little and the tenacious James Hall somehow kept Chris Long from being a starter, and the defensive wall provided by Gary Gibson and Clifton Ryan is a far cry from what we expect from today’s incumbents. Perhaps the main comparison is that, last season, Robert Quinn single-handedly gained more sacks than the whole of the 2009 defensive line. The linebackers were not much better either, comprising promising rookie James Laurinaitis, Mr Irrelevant David Vorbora and…Paris Lenon? Current starters Laurinatis, Alec Ogletree and Jo-Lonn Dunbar would have these guys for breakfast.

And, as for the secondary…it might be best to avert your gaze. The starting cornerbacks were Ron Bartell and a forgettable Quincy Butler, while the safety positions were manned by James Butler (there’s another one of ‘those’ free agents!) and hard-hitting O. J. Atogwe before the Redskins spoiled him. The fact that this quartet managed to snag no more than five interceptions between them goes some way towards explaining why the Rams lost fifteen games that season.

Apart from Jackson and his successor Zac Stacy, and Atogwe and Lamarcus Joyner (mainly by virtue of the fact that the latter is still to play a down for the Rams and is more of an unknown quantity than fellow rookie projected starters Greg Robinson and Aaron Donald), I would argue that EVERY position is stronger heading into next season than back in 2009, in some cases significantly so. This shows how far the Rams have come since those days, a source of great joy for every Rams fan who sincerely hopes that those dreadful times are far behind.
 

SierraRam

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Comparison? Thanks Mr. Snead & Fisher. We're back!

"EVERY position is stronger heading into next season"
 

LesBaker

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When I read "A plucky over-achiever and one-time crowd-favorite" I kinda raised an eyebrow. I'd never describe Bulger that way.

The rest of the article was OK, we all know the roster has been purged and is being rebuilt.

Thanks again Dan!!!
 

SaneRamsFan

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Wanna know how sick I am? I loved that team and believed in them right down to the bitter end. Somebody has to be a fan. I would get so mad when "fan" would bad mouth Bulger. Nobody wanted it worse but the guy didn't have achance. But never ever say he wasn't tough. I remember one game that year they were getting killed. My se ats were in the end zone than and it was the end of the game but Bulger was still trying to get a score. He dropped back and the LT whiffed his block and you could see his neck(Bulger) snap back and his mouthpiece fly out as he was buried in the turf. Dude jumped up and ran to the line and clocked the ball. Yea I'm a fan.
 

Mojo Ram

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Perhaps the main comparison is that, last season, Robert Quinn single-handedly gained more sacks than the whole of the 2009 defensive line.
 

Boffo97

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2009 is a weird year to compare to. Spags hadn't gotten much in the way of inheritance after Linehan and Zygmunt drove the team into the ground.

First year, no talent. Third year, massive injuries. Snakebit.
 

-X-

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2009 is a weird year to compare to. Spags hadn't gotten much in the way of inheritance after Linehan and Zygmunt drove the team into the ground.

First year, no talent. Third year, massive injuries. Snakebit.
Pretty much.
 

Selassie I

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When I read "A plucky over-achiever and one-time crowd-favorite" I kinda raised an eyebrow. I'd never describe Bulger that way.

The rest of the article was OK, we all know the roster has been purged and is being rebuilt.

Thanks again Dan!!!



I couldn't read anymore after that Bulger comment.

I'm doing my best to try and block those horrible times completely out of my mind. I'm going to pour myself a mimosa right now.
 

LesBaker

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Wanna know how sick I am? I loved that team and believed in them right down to the bitter end. Somebody has to be a fan. I would get so mad when "fan" would bad mouth Bulger. Nobody wanted it worse but the guy didn't have achance. But never ever say he wasn't tough. I remember one game that year they were getting killed. My se ats were in the end zone than and it was the end of the game but Bulger was still trying to get a score. He dropped back and the LT whiffed his block and you could see his neck(Bulger) snap back and his mouthpiece fly out as he was buried in the turf. Dude jumped up and ran to the line and clocked the ball. Yea I'm a fan.

Nobody is saying he wasn't tough, he played with a broken rib and that's harsh.

But my issue was the description of Bulger.
 

Angry Ram

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I thought Jacob Bell was underrated. When he was out the OL was a helluva lot worse than it already was.

Jason Brown was a stud his first year here, but then kinda mailed it in. I don't think his heart was there, and I don't blame him on account of his brother. I have nothing but respect for both those men.

But now...the Rams are moving their 2nd overall tackle to left guard b/c there's already a former Pro Bowl tackle there.
 

Dodgersrf

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That was a very painful read.

Thankfully, those dark days are over.

Win loss record aside, the opposition better get ready for a full 60 minute fist fight this season.
 

moklerman

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Nobody is saying he wasn't tough, he played with a broken rib and that's harsh.

But my issue was the description of Bulger.
Why is it not accurate? Dude was a 6th round nobody from New Orleans that "took" MVP Kurt Warner's job. Sounds like an overachiever to me. He was once a fan favorite also seems accurate. The fans fell in love with him right away and slowly but eventually turned on him.
 

moklerman

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Look up the word plucky.
adjective
  1. having or showing determined courage in the face of difficulties.
I still don't see the problem. If they'd called him a real student of the game and that he loved the game of football...okay, I could disagree. But Bulger, as much as I wasn't a fan of his, got beat to shit and still came back for more. He nearly overcame his Danny White situation in taking over for a fan favorite/legend and he did it all with quiet professionalism.
 

LesBaker

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I'd argue that courage and determination, which is how pluck is defined, were not Bulgers strong suit. Different than tough and getting up after being hit, he was being paid to play so he did. But clearly we don't agree on this so no matter.