Dark cloud still hovers over Rams/Wagoner

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RamBill

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Dark cloud still hovers over Rams
By Nick Wagoner

http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/10861/dark-cloud-still-hovers-over-rams

EARTH CITY, Mo. -- This year represents the 15th anniversary of the St. Louis Rams victory in Super Bowl XXXIV.

It was a magical season that appeared as if from nowhere led by an MVP quarterback coming from parts unknown. It was a team that had won a combined 15 games over the previous three seasons and hadn't been to the playoffs since 1989.

Suddenly, everything fell into place and Kurt Warner became one of the most beloved players in franchise history and the de facto conductor of the three-year run known as the "Greatest Show on Turf." It was perhaps one of the most entertaining teams (and certainly offenses) in league history.

But in retrospect, it's hard not to wonder if one of the team's then power brokers, someone such as president John Shaw or president of football operations Jay Zygmunt, made some sort of deal with the devil to create that perfect storm.

Because what's happened in St. Louis since, especially at the quarterback position, might change your stance on the existence of voodoo or magic or curses.

Over the past decade, much like the decade that preceded Warner and the Greatest Show, the Rams have been among the league's most futile franchises. They haven't had a winning record since 2003 or been to the postseason since 2004. They won just 15 games over a five-year stretch beginning in 2007.

Much of that failure had been self-inflicted through poor drafts, misguided free-agent signings and a lack of a plan or leadership at the top. And now, in 2014, when the young talent the Rams have accumulated in two seasons under coach Jeff Fisher and Les Snead looked poised to take a step, they lost quarterback Sam Bradford for the season after he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee for the second time.

It was one of five injuries to starters the Rams suffered against the Browns and the biggest and most devastating of the five. Apparently, the nickname "Factory of Sadness" for FirstEnergy Stadium in Cleveland doesn't apply only to the home team.

"I was asked last night if I had experienced anything like we experienced in the first half and my answer was no," Fisher said. "It’s every head coach’s and general manager’s and player and assistant coach’s nightmare. We had five starters come out of the game and then not return. It’s a very, very difficult experience to go through in the preseason."

Difficult experiences have become old hat for fans of the Rams, especially during their time in St. Louis. They were teased with all of the greatness and Hall of Fame talent of the Greatest Show era, but other than that they've had nothing to cling to but hope.

Take the quarterback position as a prime example. In comparison to many teams around the league, it appears they've had quite a bit of stability at the position. Over the past 15 years, they've had just three quarterbacks as the primary starter: Warner, Marc Bulger and Bradford. On further inspection, that stability is merely a mirage.

Since 2002, the Rams have had a quarterback start all 16 games just three times. Injuries created the opening for Bulger to take over for Warner and eventually spelled the end for Bulger before the Rams drafted Bradford. It's somewhat ironic that Bradford, whom the Rams must now look to replace, is responsible for two of those seasons.

That isn't to say Warner or Bradford or Bulger was brittle so much as it's an indictment of the way the teams were built around them, including some particularly shoddy offensive lines. There's plenty of bad luck involved, too, considering how many quarterbacks take hits all the time and are able to avoid serious injury. Both of Bradford's injuries have come on fluke plays rather than bone-jarring hits.

With Shaun Hill as the starter, this season isn't lost. The Rams still have a talented defense and other young, ascending players. Hill should provide a steady hand for a run-first offense. But it was hard enough to imagine the breakthrough year the Rams hoped for in the rugged NFC West even with Bradford.

For those that have worked so hard to get the Rams back to prominence and the fans that have stuck with the team through thick and thin, Bradford's injury is devastating, but it's also nothing new for a team that once caught one of the biggest breaks of all and hasn't caught one since.
 

Force16X

anti pedestrian
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it'll be just like the 70's again ! good defense, a bunch of running backs, and a new qb every 2 years or less ! awesome ! old gabriel, hadl, harris, jaworski, namath, haden, ferragamo. when did bert jones show up ? hopefully disco wont make a comeback.
 

VARam

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Well, he's correct.

I have to wonder, and don't like doing this, would a Southern California homecoming reverse the curse?


Sad to say, I think it would. Teams that move bring bad juju.
 

-X-

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Well, he's correct.

I have to wonder, and don't like doing this, would a Southern California homecoming reverse the curse?


Sad to say, I think it would. Teams that move bring bad juju.
Is a Super Bowl win bad juju?
I'll take some more of that then, please.
 

VARam

Guest
well, as wagoner said, someone made a deal with the devil to briefly reverse the natural order of the universe. Without the three years it's been one shitstorm after another. Not to mention St. Louis' 54-year history with the NFL. It's tragic.
 

Mojo Ram

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Well, he's correct.

I have to wonder, and don't like doing this, would a Southern California homecoming reverse the curse?


Sad to say, I think it would. Teams that move bring bad juju.
Yeah because those LA Rams teams were never bad and caught all the lucky breaks.
 

VARam

Guest
Yeah because those LA Rams teams were never bad and caught all the lucky breaks.
I wasn't saying that. However, they've had more winning seasons than St. Louis put together...and that's including the Big Red. 8* (* 1982 strike) playoff appearances in 54 years is beyond pathetic.
 

Mojo Ram

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I wasn't saying that. However, they've had more winning seasons than St. Louis put together...and that's including the Big Red. 8* (* 1982 strike) playoff appearances in 54 years is beyond pathetic.
Awe come on... i think you were saying that.
This team moving anywhere right now won't help anything... and your off-handed pitch for LA is weak. It's been 20 years. Let it go.

Sorry but i'm in a bad mood. Fans just need to stick that whiny come back to LA talk in the ground and bury it. I felt compassion for you guys for several years after '95 but it's 2014. Move the fuck on with your sports lives. At this point it's either crying or trolling.
 

VARam

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Don't lump me in with them. I'm a St. Louis transplant, but I gotta call it like I see it.
 

Mojo Ram

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It's nothing personal @VARam . I apologize for jumping on you.

I stand by my second paragraph though...adamantly. :)