LANDOVER, Md. — Two demonstrations of social activism by some St. Louis Rams players haven't affected the team's performance on the field.
To the contrary, the Rams haven't put up back-to-back games like this in nearly seven decades.
The Rams blanked the Washington Redskins 24-0 Sunday, giving the franchise its first winning streak of the season and its first consecutive shutouts since the Cleveland Rams beat the Chicago Cardinals 21-0 and the Chicago Bears 17-0 during the 1945 season.
"1945? We're about to shut out three!" defensive tackle Michael Brockers said. "When's the last time we shut out three?"
That would be never. Brockers will get a chance to back up the guarantee at home against the Arizona Cardinals on Thursday.
Such blustering aside, several Rams players offered another sobering reminder of life and death beyond the confines of football. Guard Davin Joseph wrote the words "I Can't Breathe" on the cleats he wore during pregame warmups. Receiver Kenny Britt wrote on his cleats several names of black men or teens, including Michael Brown and Trayvon Martin, whose deaths led to protests.
And, of course, this was the same team whose receivers performed a "Hands Up, Don't Shoot!" show of solidarity before a home game a week earlier. The slogans reference Eric Garner and Brown, who were killed in confrontations with police in cases which, amid much dispute, did not lead to indictment by grand juries.
"Every life in this world is worth something," Joseph said. "And when you lose one, it hurts, no matter who it is. We have to stand for the value of life."