If Kroenke gets his way, it will be over for the Rams in St. Louis after 431 games. That total includes preseason, regular season and postseason contests. I’m the only media member to have seen all 431 in person.

From colorful-yet-flawed quarterback “Pretty Tony” Banks and his dog Felony to running back Todd Gurley. From the talented but troubled Lawrence Phillips to the offensive pyrotechnics of the Greatest Show on Turf.

Strolling the sidelines were the likes of “Big Daddy” Rich Brooks; “Mad” Mike Martz; the hard-driving, yet ultra-positive Dick Vermeil; and Jeff Fisher.

I can recall only two times when I thought I might be in jeopardy of missing a Rams game. There was the Buffalo game in 2012, and a flight cancellation. I managed to arrive in time on a snowy day to see Martz in the press box, working the game for network television. He told me that Danny Amendola, then the Rams’ top wide receiver, would have had trouble making any of his Greatest Show teams.

The other near miss: I was sick all week in Atlanta for Super Bowl 34 — of all games — capping the 1999 season. But with the help of Rams coverage teammate Elizabethe Holland, I made it to the press box that Sunday to cover the spine-tingling 23-16 victory over Tennessee (along with about 20 other P-D writers, photographers and editors).