The Rams battled but still ultimately came up short in Seattle by a wide margin. While the Rams offense showed some signs of life via nice throws by Jared Goff and a 20+ yard run by Todd Gurley, they failed to score a touchdown. The closest they got was a Brian Quick wide open drop in the end zone, in addition to a Michael Thomas drop with room all in the first quarter.

The defense played a strong game, hampered by terrible field position by most of the game, accented by a short field caused by a rare Johnny Hekker misfire on a fake. This game was perhaps the best game by Alec Ogletree, who was all over the field and even responsible for the lone turnover in the game.

While many perceive that this job is an attractive one (here, here, here, you get the picture), I don’t believe that it is.

The Rams previous regime had a long leash with Jeff Fisher from Stan Kroenke, and this was because the owner knew he wanted to move to Los Angeles. While he may have been a little “too patient” with Fisher, a new stadium and potential neighbor is on the horizon. The Rams do not want to build a new, shiny stadium only to be the equivalent of the Clippers at the Staples Center.

NFL head coaching jobs are definitely coveted as there are only 32 openings in the world. However, one look at this roster, management, and expectations may put some thought in any potential coach. We have some early odds for the next coach and most are on the offensive side of the ball.

Let’s hope for the best as we welcome the change from the Fisherball era.

Last note, here’s some scary room for thought...... I’m curious about your responses below...

@TurfShowTimes if you got to keep 10 players on this team but scrap the rest which ones would you keep? — ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) (@patrickgriffard) December 16, 2016

Mine would be: