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The Cards
turned on an entire city still one more time..........................
Photo
by Ed Szepanski - Getty
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which
wasn't lost on Steven Jackson, Brandon Lloyd(above) and the St. Louis
Rams
Photo- Dilip
Vishwanat- Getty Images
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Let’s see if I can wrap my hands
around what’s been
happening in St Louis these past few days. The
baseball contingent of that fair city with the
arch once again
refused to lose to a Texas Rangers team that kept putting runs on the
board all
the way through the 10th inning.
When the Rangers finally came up short
in their half of the
11th, the Cards finally put them out of their misery in the
bottom
half, hometown boy David Freese laying down the hammer with a walk-off
homer to
center, this after he had tied the game at nines in the bottom of the
ninth
with a 2-out 2-strike triple to right over a flailing Nelson Cruz.
If the St. Louis fans weren’t crazy
enough after tying the
Series in miraculous fashion in Game 6, they got to enjoy watching
Chris
Carpenter, their ace throughout the post-season, really and truly
squelch any
hope the Rangers may have still had . As
a bonus, David Freese once again was the hero at the plate, immediately
taking
Carpenter off the hook with his 2-run tying double in the bottom of the
first. The hometown boy became the MVP
of course and that arch looked as shiny as it ever had as St. Louis
celebrated
late into the evening.
If it had been just a few heroes who
came through for the
Cards, acknowledged stars like Pujols, Berkman and Holliday, it would
have been
a good thing surely. But this Cards team
was so much more than that. There was
Freese of course. But there were also
guys,
young and old alike, named Allen Craig and Rafael Furcal, John Jay and
Nick
Punto. Skip Schumaker and Yadier Molina, Daniel Descalso and Ryan
Theriot, all
turning in whatever they could whenever they could.
And they had done it since late
August, coming back from 10 ½
back to capture the wildcard, then whipping the
Phillies and all their aces in the NLDS,
the Brewers and all their sluggers in the NLCS before finally
extinguishing
those Texas Rangers’ hopes.
Then, as if basking in the light of
that Cards magnificent
championship, the lowly Rams, that town’s NFL entry, a team that hadn’t
managed
to win a game all year, slugged out a convincing victory over the team
that had
been Super Bowl champions as recently as two years ago.
They did it with their reserve quarterback
and one Steven Jackson, one of the finest running backs in the league
when
healthy.
Those Rams made the Saints look like,
well, themselves at
their worst. Drew Brees was
terrible. The Saints couldn’t run the
ball, the Saints couldn’t pass the ball, and, just when it looked as if
the
Saints could mount one of their patented comebacks, the Rams said “I
don’t think
so” and intercepted Brees to extend their unlikely lead even further to
31-14. The Rams would not return home on
empty that day. They looked a lot like
their baseball brethren, refusing to lose, especially after that fine
start.
So, if you’re into baseball, you’ve
got to like the
Cardinals. If you live in St. Louis and
are into baseball, you’ve got to love them. Yeah,
Pujols may not return, manager LaRussa
is retiring and who knows what else
the fates may hold in store for them, but those St. Louis fans will
remember
this 2011 group for a long, long time.
But now you can be a Rams fan too. Perhaps all they needed was an inspiration,
the kind of inspiration only a team such as that Cards team could
provide. A lot of teams have talent. All they lack is the will to win.
Those Cards had that in their back pockets
with their chew.
Maybe that Cards glow will fade in
time, but the Rams were
on fire on Sunday. They were as
determined as they’d been all year. Run
the ball, no problem, Steven Jackson alone garnered
159 yards all by himself. Stop
the run, no problem….they gave up fewer
than 60 yards. Defend the pass, they’d
do that too with an interception that was run back for that final TD
that put
the Saints to bed.
Society being what we are today, not
many analysts gave the
Rams any credit for the victory, it was too much fun to batter Brees
and the
Saints. It wasn’t Jackson who excelled,
it was the Saints failure to tackle. It
wasn’t newly-acquired Brandon Lloyd
getting wide open in the end zone, it was lousy coverage by the Saints. It wasn’t a tough D that stopped Brees
cold…..well,
you get the idea.
Even the greatest Rams fan of all, my
brother, had given up
on his favorite team by Week 8. He’d
been disappointed for too long. He’d
seen enough from what had become a totally uninspired group of football
players
on both sides of the ball. The Rams
averaged fewer than 10 points scored while usually surrendering 30 or
more.
Ironically, he had picked the lowly
Jaguars to cover against
the Texans (a push, as things turned out), but he wasn’t quite ready to
spend
any more love on a Rams team that had shown nothing since the final
exhibition
game. The same man who had garnered hope
from every conceivable Rams indication of talent for seven weeks had
finally
given up.
What he hadn’t figured on was
lightning in a bottle, a city
brimming with admiration for its baseball team, hometown heroes making
good, and unlikely candidates thrusting
themselves
into the heart of the fray. He hadn’t
figured on the Rams wanting some of that too. He
hadn’t figured on that Cards winning glow rubbing
off, affecting even
those lowly Rams, a team that had seemed impervious to even any
suggestion of
hope before Sunday.
I’ll bet there had been no room for
blues in that St. Louis locker
room on Sunday. That Rams football team
came to play. Forty-five guys were
saying ”Give me some of that”.