Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fans were missing piece for LA Rams

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A 46-9 season-opening victory should excite any NFL fan base. For the Los Angeles Rams’ sake, let’s hope so.

The Rams obliterate­d the hapless Indianapol­is Colts on Sunday at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum. Second-year quarterbac­k and former No. 1 pick Jared Goff looked good, completing 21 of 29 passes for 306 yards and 1 touchdown. The defense returned two intercepti­ons for touchdowns and held the Colts to three field goals.

Plenty of empty seats were witnesses.

The Rams were not a hot ticket, and classifyin­g interest as lukewarm probably is too generous.

The 93,000-plus stadium had a paid attendance of 60,128 (that’s tickets sold), yet it looked less than half-full, Pro Football Talk reported. In contrast, Southern California drew 77,614 at the Coliseum on Saturday for its game against Stanford.

Cost shouldn’t have been an obstacle to attending the game. According to cbssports.com, at 8 a.m. LA time — or five hours before kickoff — there were 73 seats available on the secondary-ticket website Stubhub for under $10. The cheapest ticket was $6.

In contrast, the Philadelph­ia Eagles at the Washington Redskins was the only other NFL game with a ticket for under $20 at the same time — and the cheapest one for that game was $18.

And just think, the Rams now have company in town with the Chargers playing their first season in sunny LA.

The city is known for its late-arriving sports crowds, particular­ly to Dodgers and Lakers games. The Rams would welcome that scenario right now.

So sorry

Quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield has apologized for planting Oklahoma’s flag at midfield of Ohio State’s stadium after the Sooners’ victory over the Buckeyes.

After Saturday night’s 31-16 victory, Mayfield ran around the field at Ohio Stadium with a crimson OU flag, took it to the “O” at midfield and stuck it in the ground as his teammates celebrated around him.

“It was an emotional game, and so after the game, I did not mean for it to be disrespect­ful toward any Ohio State people at all, especially not the team or the players,” Mayfield said Monday. “They’re a great team, a great program, so I didn’t mean for it to be disrespect­ful at all.”

Mayfield said the Sooners do the same thing with the flag when they play Texas, but that game is played at a neutral site in Dallas each year. Mayfield said he should have saved his celebratio­n for the locker room.

“Obviously, if they did that here [in Norman], I’d be p*****, too,” he said. “Not surprised looking back on it. I understand why they’re very upset about it, but I didn’t mean it to be disrespect­ful in any way.”

Oklahoma Coach Lincoln Riley said he believes Mayfield’s apology was genuine.

“I know him well enough to know what he meant by it,” Riley said. “Not anything disrespect­ful towards Ohio State. It was an emotional game, and it was him celebratin­g with his teammates. I know that’s why it happened.”

Riley said the incident shouldn’t overshadow the game. Mayfield, a Heisman finalist last season, threw for 386 yards and three touchdowns as Oklahoma rallied to beat the Buckeyes.

“It was a great atmosphere in Columbus,” Riley said. “They did a great job, and it was a fun game. I think you see by how many people watched it that the rest of the country agreed as well. So that, to me, should be the focus of what happened.”

 ?? AP/ALEX GALLARDO ?? Fans cheer before Sunday’s game between the Rams and Colts in Los Angeles. Despite a paid attendance of 60,128, the crowd looked less than half-full, according to Pro Football Talk.
AP/ALEX GALLARDO Fans cheer before Sunday’s game between the Rams and Colts in Los Angeles. Despite a paid attendance of 60,128, the crowd looked less than half-full, according to Pro Football Talk.

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