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Six

Their loadouts are pretty good, missions are similar to real ones/events and that's where they should have stopped. The drama they try to have between teammates is retarded. Obviously I've never spent time in a SEAL Team, let alone DEVGRU, but throughout my time on other Special Operations/JSOC teams, there was never that weird high school drama shit that they try to pull.

Interesting show though.

2017 Rams Renewal package...

Les,
That's precisely why many of us will not renew:

1) When you purchased the deposit, there was little correlation between purchase time and designation to purchase actual seats. I knew several people who got in after I did and were purchasing before me.

2) The Rams told the season ticket purchasers that they were trying to remove the brokers from season seats. We all see how well that worked.

3) The Rams screwed up parking by opening it to everyone at the same time instead of designating times like they were supposed to.

4) They have explored few options to assist ticket holders to sell/donate seats prior to game day. This has led many people to eat the cost of their ticket since they cannot get rid of it at full or near full price. It took me five minutes worth of effort to call a boys and girls club in la to donate tickets. I live in Sacramento, the Rams Staff would not assist. Pathetic!

5) The Rams would not even offer an upgrade to those renewing. Instead appearing to give the old seats to those who made deposits very late.

As with any membership, people want to feel that they are treated special as a value of their membership. The Rams have failed to do this. You'll note my jab at Jake Bye is not in blue.

I think the only way to (mostly) push out brokers is to take the ticket sales offline. And I'm not convinced that the owners or NFL care about who is buying the tickets as long as they are being bought so they will pay lip service to the fans.

I wonder what they are going to do because I think that a lot of people are going to say "no thanks".

They will have to eat crow and open up season ticket sales again. Egg on the face IMO.

Super Bowl LI

https://theringer.com/nfl-playoffs-...-new-england-patriots-51d67392c5e6#.rs2360qrj

Lessons From a Legendary Loss
The Falcons blew the Super Bowl in spectacular fashion, but their shame provides three valuable lessons for future Patriots foes
Kevin Clark
Staff Writer, The Ringer


The Atlanta Falcons could not pinpoint exactly what went wrong in Super Bowl LI, when they blew a 25-point lead, failed to secure the first title in franchise history, and made Dikembe Mutombo miserable. They made plenty of mistakes, committing costly holding penalties, allowing a debilitating sack on Matt Ryan in the fourth quarter, and losing a late fumble that set up a crucial Patriots score, but none of those were the problem.

They were the symptoms of the problem, the byproduct of the one thing the Falcons could not control: They had to play the New England Patriots.

Other than the henchmen in Bond movies, who fall down at the most inopportune moments, no one makes more mistakes than teams playing New England in Super Bowls. The Seattle Seahawks threw from the 1-yard line against the Patriots with a championship on the line despite employing Marshawn Lynch at the time, and Malcolm Butler promptly picked off the pass.

The Philadelphia Eagles ran the slowest hurry-up offense in history against them in the Super Bowl, playing with no urgency and all but ensuring they’d never get close late. The Panthers kicked off out of bounds before the final possession of their Super Bowl, giving the Patriots amazing field position and setting up a game-winning field goal.

The Rams famously wouldn’t move away from Marshall Faulk even though the Patriots were roughing him up on every play and Rams players were begging head coach Mike Martz to change the game plan.

In essence, the Patriots turn every opponent into a Gus Bradley team. That isn’t luck; it’s strategy. As I wrote after New England sealed its 34–28 victory on Sunday, consistency is the key: Bill Belichick’s team does the correct thing over and over until the opponent does the wrong thing.

Think about how Rafael Nadal plays tennis, or how the Fast & Furious franchise remains essential: It’s about constant quality; it’s about always returning serve.

Here’s the problem for the NFL’s other 31 teams: For the bulk of the Super Bowl, the Falcons put up an Oscar contender and fired ace after ace, and it still wasn’t enough. They played nearly flawless football, building a 25-point lead behind an MVP-winning quarterback and overachieving defense, and then the Patriots still did what the Patriots so often do.

Hell, New England is so good that Belichick capped his fifth championship by complaining about wasting five weeks of 2017 prep time.

How can anyone hope to compete with that absent a Giants-esque playoff miracle? Here are the three keys to one day toppling Belichick’s seemingly unstoppable force.

1. Don’t Overthink It
From now on, when young coaches come up through the NFL ranks, the vets will show them the Falcons’ fourth quarter as a prime example of how not to close out a game. Past Patriots wins have reinforced some basic football know-how — seriously, people, don’t ever throw the ball from the damn 1-yard line! — and this game reminded us all that running the ball to drain clock is generally pretty wise.

Sure, NFL coaches have theoretically known this for 100 years, but that didn’t affect offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan, who called just five run plays after Atlanta went up 28–3 in the second half.

Running backs Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman had proved to be perfect complements to Ryan’s passing all season, but instead of handing off late, the Falcons kept passing, and worse, they also routinely snapped the ball with more than 10 seconds on the play clock in the fourth quarter. The Patriots finished regulation with two timeouts left, while the Falcons had blown theirs before crunch time.

The Falcons wasted a 25-point lead in part because they put almost no pressure on the Patriots from a time perspective. Knocking off Belichick and Tom Brady requires smartly managing the clock.

2. Get in Shape
After the loss, Atlanta head coach Dan Quinn admitted that his team ran “out of gas” in the fourth quarter. A few feet away from where Quinn was speaking, the Patriots were widely discussing their outstanding conditioning. Fitness was a talking point for both sides because it truly mattered late.

The Patriots ran almost double the plays the Falcons ran, so it’s no surprise the defense was tired, but that doesn’t account for the Atlanta offense losing so much steam. Also, uh, the Patriots were on the field for all of those offensive plays as well, and they managed to maintain plenty of zip on offense.

Belichick spoke after the game about how important conditioning was in the contest, echoing something he’s long preached. He noted specifically that superior conditioning is the main attribute that former lacrosse star Chris Hogan brought with him from his prior sport.

Wide receiver Julian Edelman, who notably got significantly better in the fourth quarter and made a will-be-shown-in-every–New England–bar-forever catch on a pass everyone who lives in Atlanta bobbled, talked after the game about the New England hills that coaches make the players run.

“We’ve got these stupid hills in Foxborough that we have to run, and we all bitch and complain about it, but we do it,” Edelman said. The next team that faces the Patriots in a big game better find some hills, because that training clearly mattered on Sunday.

3. Make Adjustments — Because the Pats Rarely Will
No Patriots opponent will have a better coach or quarterback, since the Pats have the best ever in both categories. But there are other edges to gain if the opponent is willing to make more adjustments to combat the Patriots’ typically rigid defensive game plan.

The Pats force offensive stars like Julio Jones and Faulk out of the game, and if an opponent switches to an offense that accounts for that reality, it stands a far better chance of scoring, even if the points don’t come from the offense’s usual bread and butter.

Quarterback Matt Ryan detailed on Sunday night how the Patriots brought slightly more pressure in the second half without wavering from or altering their game plan. No matter what, they were going to bracket Jones with double coverage and make the Falcons’ running backs or non-Jones receivers beat them.

And the Falcons were enjoying roaring success with Freeman, who averaged 6.8 yards per carry on the night. Quinn and Shanahan had the chance to be coaching legends by capitalizing on what was working, shifting toward the effective ground game to gain yards and burn time. Instead, Ryan continued to pass, and the Atlanta offense stalled as the Patriots started to soar.

It actually is possible for a coach to go toe-to-toe with Belichick, but doing so involves finding the confidence to attempt the midgame adjustments that many NFL coaches are too stubborn or too uncomfortable to make. That hesitation plays into the Patriots’ already-loaded hands.

Maybe the next team that plays the Patriots in a Super Bowl will learn from these lessons. But if Sunday night’s game — and the past 15 years — have taught us anything, it’s that the next squad that squares off against New England with the Lombardi Trophy on the line will likely make the same silly mistakes.
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Bummer Pats handed another, but...

Patriots top draft picks since the chowder wizard has been in charge:

Cyrus Jones CB
Malcom Brown DT
Dominique Easley DT
Jamie Collins OLB
Chandler Jones DE
Nate Solder OT
Devin McCourty CB
Pat Chung DB
Jerod Mayo ILB
Brandon Meriweather DB
Laurence Maroney RB
Logan Mankins OG
Vince Wilfork DT
Ty Warren DE
Daniel Graham TE
Richard Seymour DT
Adrian Klemm OT

-No WR's
-Only two offensive skill position picks(TE Graham and RB Maroney)
-Mostly defensive picks(DLine and secondary)
-Heavy on both DLine and OLine

Having Brady at QB obviously is a factor but i doubt the Colts w/Manning, Steelers w/Roethlesberger, Saints w/Brees and Packers w/Rodgers drafts resemble the Patriots drafts just because they had "their HOF guy" at QB.

Gonzalez: Sean McVay likes to attack deep, will seek more balance with Rams

Defense will be just fine. Austin is very talented and he will explode in a new offense , he played really well 2 years ago but was ruined by that terrible offense last season. No what I expect Goff to be a top qb in year 2 it just isn't going to happen but he will be alot better because the actually hired a real offensive guy not some tight end coach that ran the same 10 plays all year .
Austin is not a good WR not now or 2 years ago. Dropping passes won't change in a different scheme. What do you mean when you say the defense will be just fine? How? RQ may never be the same aND without him we get no pressure on the QB. If we lose Tru and McDonald we are in big trouble. What if Gaines doesn't bounce back after a horrible season? Sorry just don't see the defense playing lights out when they have to adjust to a new scheme.

A little help from ROD needed...

I'm not on any form of social media, otherwise I would help out.
Very cool of you to do this though.

Thanks for the support - It would be great if you could log onto www.flutterfree.com and just sign up in the top right hand corner - basically I'm doing this for free so that the addiction charity I work for get money from the Government for the next year - it's surprising the amount of 'educated' politicians don't think that addictions are an issue that need to be sorted out!!