Soul Surfer
Legend
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2017
- Messages
- 6,878
- Name
- Charles Mazyck
Winning cures everything.No easy or quick fix to the Sofi dilemma.
It just takes time.
Winning cures everything.No easy or quick fix to the Sofi dilemma.
Sad to say, but this is one of the best explanations I've heard about this problem -- and it's a serious problem. Rams players were mic'd up on a video I saw a few weeks ago on an away game, one of them was lamenting, "oh so is this how it feels to play a home game?" (referring to the support the other team was getting from their home fans).Yep. There were whole convos in certain online communities about arbitrage opportunities at various price points and once the stadium was finished and so many fans saw seeing an away game in SoFi as a bucket list item, locsl fans had to contend with once-in-a-lifetime vacation money.
With where the economics of live sporting events is now, I’m not sure there’s a price point that packs the place with loyal fans while dissuading ticket brokers and investors from coming in.
Lower ticket prices make the arbitragers more money and higher prices price out many local fans reducing overall local demand and creating a denser pool of arbitragers to fans… which means more opposing fans
There are things they could have done, but needing to recoup $5.5B means no one’s getting a price break. That ship has sailed. I’ve been to one game there and it’s worth it.
And yes, its sad we can‘t really have home games like the Packers, Patriots, Steelers and Eagles. I wish it could be different.
This is so true and I have seen McVay stick with the run on a couple of occasions, against the Patriots several years ago, but concur with this assessment. McVay cannot help himself sometimes, but in this game, run both Williams & Corum like they are ten cent ponies and stick with it throughout the contest.Buffalo can give up the run.
This probably will be the game plan and should be.
Frankly, I think its the only way the Rams keep it close....control the ball and finish with TDs, not FGs.
That said, McVay continually goes away from the run when it is working.
If the Rams fall behind early they need to keep running the ball, but, I don't think McVay will do this.
He really gets in his own way sometimes.
See my post above.Winning cures everything.
It just takes time.
It takes a lot of winning over a lot of years and kids growing up with the team to root for.If you were in Chicago for example and wanted to go to a road game....LA and Vegas, when they play there, would lead the list.
Plus LA is full of disgusting transplants from back east in particular.
No easy or quick fix to the Sofi dilemma.
...
No easy or quick fix to the Sofi dilemma.
It really is.Becoming a winning / playoff team under a high energy, young head coach, playing exciting football (with star players), going to a Super Bowl and, then winning a Lombardi (on their home field) were all supposed to accelerate the support of the Rams' Los Angeles fan base.
It didn't. That's disappointing.
No successful NFL team, in recent years, has endured such a lack of home-field fan support.
That is really disappointing.
I understand why he does this.This is so true and I have seen McVay stick with the run on a couple of occasions, against the Patriots several years ago, but concur with this assessment. McVay cannot help himself sometimes, but in this game, run both Williams & Corum like they are ten cent ponies and stick with it throughout the contest.
He really needs someone in his ear in game that can keep him on the plan.
I don't agree with that. The Rams were not worn down from losing to Detroit. The fact is in the Cards game the Ram secondary had NO CLUE!!!that game is at home and timing is everything. They caught us after the disappointing finish to the Detroit game. Our Oline was a reck. The D was worn out after playing the lions and still had a lot to learn. The Rams are way healthier, have improved and are still improving. Cards are doing what they do at the end of seasons.
Well, they might not have prepared for the Cards like they preped for the Lions. They did lose to them in a close game in the playoffs and I am sure it was their focus in the offseason. I would call that game a classic trap game. So we will add that to the list with the other things mentioned. Just one more reason they will beat the cards.I don't agree with that. The Rams were not worn down from losing to Detroit. The fact is in the Cards game the Ram secondary had NO CLUE!!!
I'm as big a Ram fan as anyone...but FACTS ARE FACTS! I really think after OWNING the Cards for so long, they took them lightly.
I went to the Dolphin game and the Rams definitely had the home crowd. At the big moments on D the crowed was really loud. Not so for the Dolphins. Yes, there were plenty of Dolphin fans. The ones I talked to were from here, which is standard for most of the opposing fans that attend these games. I don't know about anybody else, but I can't change who I have rooted for my whole life. I tried when the Rams left, but I hated to many teams for too long to change.Becoming a winning / playoff team under a high energy, young head coach, playing exciting football (with star players), going to a Super Bowl and, then winning a Lombardi (on their home field) were all supposed to accelerate the support of the Rams' Los Angeles fan base.
It didn't. That's disappointing.
No successful NFL team, in recent years, has endured such a lack of home-field fan support.
That is really disappointing.
Well, I call Mackeyser a wimp for not handling the heat in Florida. So there.Wimp! ~ @Mackeyser
I mostly blame the Reeder Rozeboom tandem on that game. However, you are right about the secondary being terrible. The safeties have gotten better and the Cardinals do not have a game breaker like Barkley.I don't agree with that. The Rams were not worn down from losing to Detroit. The fact is in the Cards game the Ram secondary had NO CLUE!!!
I'm as big a Ram fan as anyone...but FACTS ARE FACTS! I really think after OWNING the Cards for so long, they took them lightly.
Wimp! ~ @Mackeyser
Becoming a winning / playoff team under a high energy, young head coach, playing exciting football (with star players), going to a Super Bowl and, then winning a Lombardi (on their home field) were all supposed to accelerate the support of the Rams' Los Angeles fan base.
It didn't. That's disappointing.
No successful NFL team, in recent years, has endured such a lack of home-field fan support.
That is really disappointing.
I'm saying that the local fan base will slowly build up because of winning.See my post above.
Hard to win games when you're always playing on the road.