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Steve Spagnuolo Will Get Return on Rams' Defensive Line Investments

The Rams can be a playoff team next year.

That seems ridiculous now, but every year there are teams that we think require multi-year rebuilding efforts, and each year at least one of those teams shocks us all. The Rams have a lot of holes, but they've also got some valuable pieces a smart coach and front office can build around quickly.

Rumor has it that the team thought that Jason Garrett was the best coach to do this, that Steve Spagnuolo was only the top option who fit into their budget, but it doesn't matter whether or not they lucked into the right hire. They made it. While Garrett may succeed with another team, the Rams need to win right away, and Spagnuolo is better equipped to make a bigger immediate impact with the Rams' roster.

Herm Edwards is Putting John Shaw on His Christmas Card List This Year

For all intents and purposes, the Rams were going to use their second overall pick on Glenn Dorsey last weekend. All of the pre-draft hype indicated an interest and, though all of the zany behavior every April has me doubting everything everyone says, it was apparently genuine. All of the teams' scouts and coaches wanted Dorsey.

But team president John Shaw wanted Chris Long. So when he arrived at headquarters the Thursday before the draft, he decreed it so -- Long would be the pick. Even if Shaw was stepping down from his ivory tower to get involved in football matters that are better left to, you know, football people, I agree with him.

The best teams find a way to merge the two divergent draft philosophies -- need vs. best player available. Even if Dorsey was the Rams' top-rated player, they already have a good, young pair of tackles in Adam Carriker and Clifton Ryan. On the outside? The ancient, brittle Leonard Little and the ancient, um, average (to be kind) James Hall. I know a push up the middle helps your ends, but the only thing that would help these ends at this point is the Career Kevorkian.

So it makes sense to draft Long. If the team wants to win now (ie, if Scott Linehan wants to provide his family hot food every night), they need to spread talent across as many positions as possible. What good is clogging the middle if teams can just attack the outside? Right?

Cardinals Behind St. Louis Lines: Five Questions With an Enemy Blogger

Welcome to another successful installment of Five Questions with an Enemy Blogger, where each week, via email, I will be exchanging hot questions and [sometimes] answers with a rival blogger about their team and the upcoming matchup.

This week I sat down with Brett Knight of RAMblings, a Most Valuable Network column that covers the St. Louis Rams.

Dan Benton: "For many, the Rams offseason expectations were extremely high. How frustrating has it been to watch your team struggle for the first quarter of the season?"
Brett Knight: "Obviously, with so many pundits picking the Rams as a darkhorse playoff team, it's been difficult to watch the team stumble thus far, with no end in sight. But I don't know what's been harder to deal with: all the forces that have been out of our control or all the blown opportunities. It's one thing to watch your offensive line crumble and your Pro Bowl backfield taken out of games by injury - it's tough, sure, but there's really nothing you can do about it. It's a whole different story, though, to sit through the sloppy play this team has been exhibiting this year: penalties, turnovers, blown coverages, missed tackles, awful play-calling. For all the talk of the talent on this team, it's really been a shock to see such a lack of fundamentals. It's been said that the mark of a good team is how it responds to adversity; with that in mind, I'm not sure how to respond to this team."

Clifton Ryan: A Silver Lining

The Rams defense still isn't any good, no matter what Jim Haslett tells you. Still, they've found a bright spot at defensive tackle in fifth-round pick Clifton Ryan.

Before the season the Rams were, quite foolishly, expecting perennial ne'erdowell Claude Wroten and Adam Carriker to help solidify their rotation on the interior of the line. Wroten, suspended for the first four games, is actually overachieving by doing nothing (bonus points for no weed-related or DUI arrests). Enter Ryan.

The rookie from Michigan State has been very productive in limited time, posting seven tackles, two sacks, and two forced fumbles (one of which he recovered) in three games. Carriker, by comparison, has just three tackles. La'Roi Glover, the Rams' other starter, has six tackles. And Wroten's lucky if he remembers how to get to the stadium.

As the Rams start out 0-3, looking dreadful pretty much across the board, Ryan has been a bright spot. So at least there's that. Plus, check out his slick website. It's shiny. And you can even log into the Clifton Ryan forum, where you can talk all things Clifton Ryan with his mom the rest of the Clifton Ryan fan community.

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