I guarantee it has an effect on the players too. They’re emotional just like the rest of us. Having a crowd behind you gets the juices flowing. Having to use a silent count in the first quarter is pathetic. Hard to watch as a Rams fan.I don't think it's been mentioned but having a s4it crowd for home games doesn't help either. It's not the main factor, I think most of above posts are accurate as to the reasons why but the gd opponents fans at some of these home games is a disgrace and can't possibly help. When you see more of their fans then your fans in LA it's got to be a mental kick in the nuts.
I think that’s it, plus some of our young players loosing concentration after some amount of time.To me it seems that we lack halftime adjustments. Especially more so on offense, but both coaches are bad at that.
Looking at Rams', and their opponents', scoring by quarter, I noticed a trend:
First Quarter: Rams 37, Opponents 20 (+17)
Second Quarter: Rams42, Opponents 45 (-3)
Third Quarter: Rams 34, Opponents 38 (+6)
Fourth Quarter: Rams 36, Opponents 48 (-12)
So why does it seem that the Rams are starting halves fairly well, then being hit by "counterpunches" in the second and fourth quarters?
Are our opponents making better adjustments?
Is the defense wearing down toward the end of each half?
Insufficient data/anomaly?
What is your theory?
Second in the league in dropped passes.Curse of Todd Kinchen?
