Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fight forces early end to joint practice

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — The Los Angeles Rams’ second joint practice with the Las Vegas Raiders ended early when the teams had a prolonged brawl Thursday.

The fight began during special teams work, and it started and stopped several times before coaches Sean McVay and Jon Gruden decided to scrap the remaining periods of practice, which had been scheduled to last for another 45 minutes.

“Everybody knows better,” Gruden said. “It wasn’t everybody fighting. It’ll be on TV. You’ll see a bunch of guys screaming and yelling, but it was two guys in a special teams period, and then it was a lot of trash talking that just escalated. Just sickening, really, it’s just stupidity, but I’m done with that. It’s just child’s play to me.”

The culprits weren’t easily identified in the mass of players working on punt blocking and punt coverage outside the Rams’ training complex, but punches appeared to be thrown by both teams.

Gruden and McVay weren’t pleased by the disruption to the practice plan for the Raiders and the Rams, who will meet again in a preseason game Saturday night at SoFi Stadium. When the fight finally calmed, Gruden could be heard ordering his players off the field: “To the bus!”

McVay, Gruden’s employee in Tampa Bay 13 seasons ago, called the skirmish “unfortunat­e.” The Rams finished up the practice against themselves while the Raiders boarded buses back to their hotel.

“I did think that there was a lot of good work that we were getting in,” McVay said.

“We only had a little bit left, and it felt like the best decision, just based on kind of the temperatur­e of the situation, was [to] bag the last eight plays in the team period that we had.”

All-Pro Aaron Donald took a rest day for the Rams, but he wasn’t surprised to see what happened from the sideline.

“It’s football, man,” Donald said. “Honestly, every joint practice I’ve ever been a part of, there’s always a fight.”

The teams had a few minor scraps in Wednesday’s first practice, but nothing that significan­tly interrupte­d the flow. The Raiders’ defense was the biggest winner from the opening practice, putting together a solid performanc­e against the Rams’ reconfigur­ed offense under quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford.

One brouhaha Wednesday started after Raiders running back Josh Jacobs received a zealous hit from All-Pro Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey. Jacobs later tweeted: “Love this team.”

“[It was] definitely about how the whole situation was handled,” Jacobs said when asked what his tweet meant. “If you look at our guys and see how we reacted, and see their guys and how they just let some things happen … I mean, I like the fact our team got the fighting spirit, and not only that, but they had each other’s back.”

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