JoeSportsFan

Record: 1-8

Sunday's Inevitable Outcome: Saints 28, Rams 23

The Line: Saints -15

Week 10 Viewing Strategy: Recognize that the team I follow has next to no chance and just enjoy the opportunity to watch perhaps the most exciting offense since the '99 Rams

Speaking of the '99 Rams
It's about high time for a token video of the that plucky Greatest Show on Turf.  Perhaps no game symbolized the offensive firepower of the Rams quite like the Divisional Playoff game against the Minnesota Vikings in which the Rams scored on a 77-yard bomb to Isaac Bruce on their first play from scrimmage and a 41-yard screen to Marshall Faulk on their fifth offensive play en route to a 49-37 victory.

Plus you get to hear John Madden say at the 2:00 mark, "I always said that a big old Clydesdale is like a big old offensive lineman".  Because only Madden proactively compared Clydesdales to football players. 

 

Punishment for following the Rams...
As if watching one of the league's worst teams get blown out every week wasn't punishment enough, this week we got to listen to Fox's Chris Rose call the game on Sunday and frankly, no fan base deserves that.  Except maybe Jacksonville.

 Chris-Rose

By the Numbers...
Offensive rank coming into the game - Saints #1, Rams #32
Total Points coming into the game - Saints 303, Rams 77
More passing yards by the Saints than the Rams in 8 more attempts - 886

Stop Rewarding These Goons...
If you're a Fox camera man and the gentlemen who is desperately trying to get on TV is holding a sign that looks like it was created on "Sharpie Day" in a third grade art class, do us all a favor and ignore him (then we will have no choice but to do the same)

 Saints-Fans

The Moment of "This team is horrible"
After an unlikely turnover from Drew Brees puts the Rams in a position to take an early lead in the first quarter, Marc Bulger, feeling that it was only appropriate to return the favor, stares down his receiver in the endzone and tosses an easy  interception.  Symbolic of the inherent attitude of Rams fans, my immediate reaction to this is "well, that's game". 

The Moment of "This horrible team might have a shot in this game"
Sure logic tells you that it's foolish to allow yourself to believe that your 1-7 team has a legit shot to take down the 8-0 visitors, but screw logic.  Rumor has it that logic got trounced in its fantasy league last year.  When half time hits with the score 14-14, suddenly now it's a matter of the Rams just winning a half of football against the most explosive offense in the league.  A little optimistic, yes, but not totally out of the realm of possibility.  Right?

The Moment of "You thought they could win?  You're an idiot"
Having convinced yourself that the Rams beating the Saints is a distinct possibility for this new, tough-minded Rams squad, you take a seat and watch as the opening kickoff is run 97 yards for a touchdown to give the Saints a 21-14 lead and, despite some scrappiness from the Rams to make it close even with a fleeting chance to win it as time ran out, the lead was one that the Saints would never relinquish. 

Thinking the Rams had a chance to win?  Silly, naive little Rams fan. 

Competition for #32
For eight weeks, the idea of parity in the NFL was a complete crock.  Teams had firmly established themselves as haves or have nots, with the abundance of the latter creating some serious competition for the title of worst.  Suddenly in Week 10, all hell has broken loose.  Every team has at least one win, we have the Rams taking the undefeated Saints to the wire, the Bucs forcing the Dolphins to hit a last second field goal to beat them in Miami, Washington whipping the previously dominant Broncos, Tennessee winning their third in a row by putting 41 on the board.  In a matter of weeks, the bottom of the league has taken on a new look.

#26 Washington (W 27-17) - Color me shocked that they slapped around the Broncos on Sunday
#27 St. Louis (L 28-23) - They may only have one win, but at least the Coach Spags' bunch is starting to show some legit improvement.
#28 Tampa Bay (L 25-23) - After watching him bumble around at Kansas State, if Josh Freeman becomes a successful NFL QB, I will be officially stunned. 
#29 Kansas City (W 16-10) - The Chiefs became exponentially more likeable when they sent Larry Johnson packing.  Rarely has their been an athlete that was as easy to detest as Johnson. 
#30 Oakland (L 16-10) - The old Raiders-Chiefs rivalry has lost a smidge of its shine, no?
#31 Detroit (L 27-10) - If not for the Mangini-led Browns, the Lions would be setting up camp in the very familiar #32 slot.
#32 Cleveland (Mon Night) - Yeah, I get the "Browns against the former Browns" angle, but still, how in the world did ESPN allow Cleveland to get a Monday night game? 

Up Next: vs. Arizona
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WorldBFat, November 18, 2009 01:11 AM
Are Chris and Trent singing a homoerotic duet?
The Anti-Dave, November 17, 2009 01:11 PM
That's for sure. I do want to point out, not to make excuses for this year, that Jacksonville has drawn an average of 65,000 or more every year from 2004-2008...this year is NOT typical of the standard fan support to be expected in Jacksonville, yet it's being made out to be representative of the entire history of the Jaguar fan base. I mention that because this is one of the last sites where I would expect to see a casual shot like that at Jacksonville. Joesportsfan is usually above that.
Denny Loadstone, November 17, 2009 12:11 PM
Right there with you Anti-Dave...there's at least two loyal readers/Jag fans here. I personally have been to three games this year so I'm doing the best I can. People around the country don't understand that around here, it's college football first...pro second. And Jax is pretty working class...we don't have quite as many people as some other cities that can afford to drop $200-$300/game (and often times more). If they have to choose, they are spending that $$ on the Gators/Noles/Bulldogs. But now that the Jags are back in the playoff race...no excuses man. We need to get 55,000-60,000 in the stadium on Sunday. Even if it's the Bills!
The Anti-Dave, November 17, 2009 12:11 PM
I realize Jacksonville has major attendance and ticket sales problems this year, but if you check the figures for the last several, these issues are unprecedented in Jaguars history. Just because several media figures who've always trashed the city are making it out as though Jacksonville has never supported the team, or is incapable of doing so, doesn't make it accurate. Here I was coming on to read my favorite intelligent repository of entertaining sports commentary, and to offer encouragement about the Rams' situation to boot, and I get another shot at Jacksonville. For goodness' sakes.
The Anti-Dave, November 17, 2009 12:11 PM
As a loyal reader and loyal Jaguar fan, why was that shot necessary?
Ernest, November 16, 2009 02:11 PM
Bulger had two other phenomenal plays on the game-ending drive -- when he underthrew a wide-open receiver by 10 yards and hit the DB in the back; and the next to last play when, with the clock running under 15 seconds, he threw a 3-yard checkdown route to Steven Jackson in the middle of the field. All Rams fans owe Mike Martz a punch in the nuts for shackling the franchise to this bozo.

Glenn Davis

Astrodome security was always thrown for a loop whenever Glenn Davis drove his van with curtained-windows to the ballpark on opening day.

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