On the Rams moving from St. Louis to Los Angeles: "Fans in all these cities awaited for the outcome. And when it came, the message from the NFL was best summed up by Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross: "Everybody won." New York Post writer Bart Hubbuch reported that Ross was pressed on his assertion of a win-win: What about St. Louis fans? "Well, somebody has to lose," Ross replied." http://www.cnn.com/2016/01/13/us/la-rams-st-louis-rams-winners-losers/index.html?eref=rss_latest Don't think this guy would hesitate for a second to move the Fins if the money was sufficiently better elsewhere. Is that why we keep going to London?
What did you expect from our clueless owner? I wouldn't be surprised. Sent from my SM-G900T using Tapatalk
To be fair, there is absolutely nothing he could have said that would have sounded good. Only keeping his mouth shut would have worked, but when you are rich....
Ross was one of the only two folks who voted against the move, so he's obviously not with the company line here but had to be anyway.
To me the funniest part is how contradictory his statement is. "Everybody wins....somebody had to lose" Soooo not everyone won lol
Basically. We managed to bury Ross from being Ross during our coaching and GM searches, but he still managed to pop up and say something really dumb during the owner meetings.
Yeah, this screams out-of-context to me. One of two people to vote against the move and these quotes are insanely short. If you want to blast a guy for something, whatever, but if you're finding reasons to blast someone because you don't like him that just means you're the one with the problem.
Ross could have said something sympathetic to St. Louis fans, instead went to the funny douche route. Some reason I liked that he went with option B...
Do we know that Ross voted against it? I assume the two no votes were Spanos and Davis, for obvious reasons.
All I get from this is that he is a typical owner. They are driven by money first and winning second.
Tbh, I had this suspicious feeling a couple of years ago that Ross would push to move Miami to L.A. I'm glad he didn't.
The more I read the title...the more I imagine "Stone Cold Steve Ross" and him giving the Stone Cold Stunner to the commissioner. "If youve got a cold beer for Steve Ross, give me a hell yeah!"
I saw a report that said it was a secret vote. Spanos is pissed because he was given support and then came the secret vote and they gave him the ol screw job. So did Ross come out and say he voted against it? What is the real story?
It was a secret ballot, so nobody knows. Very unlikely that Ross voted no, based upon this quote: "Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, a supporter of the Inglewood project heading into the meeting, also believes moving the Rams to Los Angeles made sense. “I think we made the right decision,” Ross said. “We’re in Los Angeles, and that’s what everybody wanted.” http://espn.go.com/blog/san-diego-c...s-say-chargers-unlikely-to-play-in-la-in-2016
Where are you hearing that? Speculation is Mark Davis and Mike Brown "NFL owners in Houston on Tuesday voted 30-2 in favor of the Rams' bid to relocate to Los Angeles starting next season. As a result of an anonymous voting system — one that Peter King reports helped Stan Kroenke's Inglewood bid immensely — it is not known which two owners voted against the Rams' proposal. However, sources told Pro Football Talk's Mike Florio that, along with Raiders' owner Mark Davis, the owner who voted "no" was likely Cincinnati Bengals owner Mike Brown. Davis voting against the Inglewood proposal makes sense; he supported his joint proposal with Chargers' owner Dean Spanos for a stadium in Carson. But why on earth would Brown? Having a team (or two teams) in LA will increase revenue for the league as a whole, and increased revenue is split roughly evenly among the 32 teams. What was Brown's rationale? Let's hear it from Florio: Brown has a well-documented reputation for refusing to go along with anything that helps the league become bigger and better. His primary concern in those situations is the impact of the new revenue on the salary cap. So Brown prefers the status quo, especially when the status quo doesn’t require him to spend more money on players." http://www.businessinsider.com/why-bengals-owner-voted-against-rams-to-la-2016-1
Here is another link that says that Ross was one of the biggest supporters of the move: "Kroenke "had key supporters" in Cowboys Owner Jerry Jones and Dolphins Owner Stephen Ross, both with "estimated personal net worth ... in the top seven among NFL owners." http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/...Leagues-and-Governing-Bodies/NFL-LA-Rams.aspx
Only reason I ever read the article. Then I checked the comments to see what he said that was so harsh, in case I missed something. Basically, nothing.