Los Angeles Rams: Protection for Matthew Stafford

A month ago, the Rams looked like a near-complete team. Special teams aside, they had answers everywhere. Coaching. Quarterback. Playmakers. A defense that could steal a game if necessary. Theyโ€™re still a formidable opponent, but cracks have started to emerge.

The Rams barely survived their divisional round game against the Chicago Bears, and Sean McVay and Matthew Stafford spent the aftermath conducting a public inquest into their own performance. McVay admitted he had been guilty of โ€œbad coachingโ€ against the Bears. Stafford acknowledged he needs to play better. Neither was wrong. And yet, in the gameโ€™s final moments, Stafford still delivered the throws that mattered, and the Rams escaped thanks to their defense creating a decisive turnover.

McVay, belatedly, rediscovered the rushing game against the Bears. He ran the ball 19 times in the fourth quarter and overtime after barely doing so for three quarters. It was less an adjustment than a confession: McVay had been too pass-centric. His gameplan was wrong. And that has been the Ramsโ€™ greatest strength on offense this season: they can switch up their strategy during a game. But their two playoff games have shown fractures within the offense.

Stafford is not playing well.

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