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1978 Rams Steelers SNF

June 18, 2019 01:57AM
November 20 1978

URL = [www.si.com]

THEY OUTDEFENSED PITTSBURGH LAST WEEK, AND NO NFL TEAM HAS A BETTER RECORD THAN THEIR 9-2, BUT THE RAMS STILL CAN'T WIN FOR WINNING. SO PRETTY SOON LOS ANGELES WILL NOT HAVE THE RAMS TO KICK AROUND ANYMORE

Dan Jenkins

Among all the jokes, there is the one that says the members of the Rams' offensive unit are the first 11 no-shows at the Los Angeles Coliseum every Sunday. This is what life is like when you work in a place where much of the population is constantly being diverted by bosoms and message license plates. It isn't easy to be a part of the Rams these days, even though they are winning pretty regularly. For example, the Rams beat Pittsburgh 10-7 Sunday night in what slowly developed into an interesting football game between interconference celebrities, but when it was over, the only fascinating statistic was that the Steelers, of all teams, had turned the Rams' John Cappelletti, of all people, into a 100-yard runner.
Indeed, it was Cappelletti, perhaps the only Heisman Trophy winner ever drafted as a blocker, who made the biggest run of the night to set up the Rams' winning touchdown in the fourth quarter. Cappelletti did it with a move he doesn't posses
November 20 1978

URL = [www.si.com]

THEY OUTDEFENSED PITTSBURGH LAST WEEK, AND NO NFL TEAM HAS A BETTER RECORD THAN THEIR 9-2, BUT THE RAMS STILL CAN'T WIN FOR WINNING. SO PRETTY SOON LOS ANGELES WILL NOT HAVE THE RAMS TO KICK AROUND ANYMORE

Dan Jenkins

Among all the jokes, there is the one that says the members of the Rams' offensive unit are the first 11 no-shows at the Los Angeles Coliseum every Sunday. This is what life is like when you work in a place where much of the population is constantly being diverted by bosoms and message license plates. It isn't easy to be a part of the Rams these days, even though they are winning pretty regularly. For example, the Rams beat Pittsburgh 10-7 Sunday night in what slowly developed into an interesting football game between interconference celebrities, but when it was over, the only fascinating statistic was that the Steelers, of all teams, had turned the Rams' John Cappelletti, of all people, into a 100 yard runner.
Indeed, it was Cappelletti, perhaps the only Heisman Trophy winner ever drafted as a blocker, who made the biggest run of the night to set up the Rams' winning touchdown in the fourth quarter. Cappelletti did it with a move he doesn't possess and speed he doesn't own. What he did was slowly spin off a traffic jam at left tackle and sprint 26 yards around end on a third-down play to get the Rams to the Steelers' 10 yard line so Pat Haden could throw a touchdown pass to Willie Miller. Apart from this brief interruption by the Rams' offense, it was the usual kind of Ram game, one which has been familiar to Los Angeles fans for years and years and years. Defense.
The outcome, which left both the Rams and Steelers with 9-2 records, meant just about nothing to either team. Pittsburgh still leads the AFC Central from here to as far as Terry Bradshaw can throw a ball. And the Rams lead the NFC West by almost as many games as there are letters in Cappelletti's name. This, of course, is as much of a dilemma for the Rams' PR as their lack of speed in the backfield. No question about it, the Rams are a problem for society.
There are those in Los Angeles tens of thousands, as a matter of fact who look back with affection on something as disastrous as Crazy Legs Hirsch dropping a pass. At least it was exciting. Something happened! A Ram incompletion in those days was far more dramatic than Cappelletti throwing a block for Lawrence McCutcheon. It has been about 25 years since the Ram fan has had anything to get worked up about besides a defensive lineman. And how long can Fearsome Foursomes sustain conversation? Even now L.A. fans have probably forgotten that the Rams held Franco Harris to a measly 50 yards in his 22 carries Sunday, and that they intercepted three of Bradshaw's passes.

The '78 Rams are built on defense what else? which is the legacy of Chuck Knox and George Allen. For years, the Rams ran on first and second down, and passed on third down. They got away with it, though, because they are in a division that demands little more than staying awake for four quarters. But they also kept losing in the playoffs.
Los Angeles is not a loser's town, and the Rams have suffered from the success of the USC Trojans in football, the UCLA Bruins in basketball and the Dodgers in baseball, not to mention the undefeated record of Charlie's Angels against the bad guys. One must go back to 1951, almost to a time when nobody even cared, for the year when the Rams won their only NFL championship. They have seen all 12 Super Bowls on TV.
Allen's teams were always competitive, but Merlin Olsen didn't make very many broken-field runs. In fact, the offensive image of the Rams was Allen discussing the intricacies of the draw play with Roman Gabriel on the sideline.
This was O.K. to a point, but the promise of a title never materialized. Allen possibly suspected it never would, particularly in a town so restless and sophisticated and in some ways so uncontrollable. So after five seasons, he left for Washington in 1970. Under Knox, L.A. won five straight divisional titles but never displayed any offensive flair. Knox moved to Buffalo last winter, and the reason Allen came back for the 20 or 30 minutes he worked for Carroll Rosenbloom last summer was easy enough to understand. He was out of work.
Rosenbloom is an owner of good intentions, but it's difficult to sell this nowadays to a great many people in Los Angeles. Rosenbloom is moving the Rams to Anaheim in 1980. Anaheim may be only 35 miles away from L.A. by helicopter, but in freeway traffic that can be light-years. Anaheim is also Orange County.

To some, this is unforgivable. The California Rams? Really? People forget, however, that a man who would go so far as to hire Joe Namath and then George Allen must be trying to win. Critics believe Rosenbloom is moving down the road because Anaheim will build suites in the stadium so he can entertain friends as elegantly as Cowboy owner Clint Murchison does in Dallas. The management of the Los Angeles Coliseum wouldn't approve the kind of facelift Rosenbloom wanted. In short, Rosenbloom appreciated that the Coliseum was a relic with a lot of history, but a relic nonetheless. When Anaheim promised to give him anything he wanted, Rosenbloom said so long.
The Rams will no doubt prosper in Anaheim, and undoubtedly another NFL team will eventually play in the Coliseum. Suites or not, L.A. is too fertile an area not to have a pro football franchise, even one that might come through expansion. Maybe, however, the Rams will leave L.A. a Super Bowl championship to remember them by. That was surely Rosenbloom's intent when he hired Allen. And it was just as much his intent when he fired Allen. "I recognized a mistake and tried to correct it," he said.
The Allen controversy flared immediately. For whatever reasons, George one day held a coaches' meeting that included only those assistants who had been with him in Washington. The other coaches were hurt and infuriated. Then came the long periods of work five hours on the practice field each day that the Ram players weren't used to, and the attention to details apart from football one of Allen's first complaints was that there were crackers in only one of the two soup lines at training camp. Allen wasn't fired for losing two exhibition games. He was fired because he was creating a climate that was wrong for a certain time, place and gathering.

If new Coach Ray Malavasi, a holdover from the Knox regime, seemed to be the answer through L.A.'s first seven games



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 06/18/2019 02:15AM by JoeMad.
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

  Your three favorite non-playoff wins

Great Bordeni696June 16, 2019 08:22AM

  Those are great ones

stlramz295June 16, 2019 09:00AM

  Re: Those are great ones

MamaRAMa251June 16, 2019 09:25AM

  U r correct mama

stlramz191June 17, 2019 12:17PM

  Re: Your three favorite non-playoff wins

den-the-coach325June 16, 2019 09:20AM

  Re: Your three favorite non-playoff wins

mikeguman277June 16, 2019 12:20PM

  1978 Rams Steelers SNF

JoeMad204June 18, 2019 01:57AM

  What bugged me about that game.........

Ramgator161June 19, 2019 08:12AM

  Re: Your three favorite non-playoff wins

bigjimram21420June 16, 2019 12:28PM

  one of My favs

joram265June 16, 2019 02:41PM

  Re: Your three favorite non-playoff wins

Crazylegs191June 16, 2019 01:27PM

  Chiefs Seahawks 9ers

alyoshamucci215June 16, 2019 01:49PM

  Re: Chiefs Seahawks 9ers

idaram232June 16, 2019 02:15PM

  Re: Chiefs Seahawks 9ers

BeachBoy192June 17, 2019 12:10AM

  I meet Issac Bruce this Weekend

Killrazor257June 17, 2019 12:22AM

  +1....NM

Crazylegs171June 17, 2019 03:55AM

  Thanks for sharing... that was great! nm

RAMbler138June 18, 2019 06:26AM

  Re: Your three favorite non-playoff wins

idaram344June 16, 2019 02:08PM

  3 favorite non-playoff wins

LMU93173June 17, 2019 03:19AM

  SLAM DUNK / EASY choice for me!

Ramgator255June 17, 2019 04:17AM

  Re: SLAM DUNK / EASY choice for me!

Killrazor237June 17, 2019 06:50AM

  Re: This one is EASY for me.......

oldschoolramfan198June 17, 2019 07:51AM

  Re: Your three favorite non-playoff wins

MamaRAMa231June 17, 2019 01:50PM

  I will have to admit....

LMU93242June 17, 2019 04:45PM

  Re: OK Mama.......Chiefs game has to be on the list.

oldschoolramfan199June 18, 2019 05:48AM

  Re: Your three favorite non-playoff wins

Steve176June 17, 2019 10:22PM

  Very much enjoyed this thread...

JamesJM186June 19, 2019 07:51AM