Eric Henderson, who had served as defensive line coach and run game coordinator, departed the Rams to join the USC Trojans football staff to serve as co-defensive coordinator, run game coordinator, and defensive line coach.[1]
Raheem Morris, the Rams' defensive coordinator since 2021, was hired by the Atlanta Falcons as head coach.[2] He is the sixth former Rams assistant to be hired as a head coach after serving on Sean McVay's staff.
Zac Robinson, who had spent the previous five seasons on the Rams' coaching staff in various positions, most recently as pass game coordinator/quarterbacks coach, followed Raheem Morris to the Atlanta Falcons to become the team's new offensive coordinator.[3]
Jimmy Lake, the Rams' assistant head coach in 2023, joined Morris in Atlanta to serve as defensive coordinator.[4]
Jeremy Springer, a special teams assistant for the Rams the previous two seasons, was hired by the New England Patriots as special teams coordinator.[5]
Chris Shula, who served in a variety of roles on the Rams coaching staff for the previous seven seasons as an assistant, most recently as pass rush coordinator & linebackers coach in 2023, was elevated to defensive coordinator, succeeding Raheem Morris.[6]
Giff Smith, most recently the interim head coach of the Los Angeles Chargers, was hired by the Rams to take on dual responsibilities as defensive line coach and run game coordinator, succeeding Eric Henderson in both roles.[7]
The Rams hired Chili Davis, former Kansas State Wildcats special teams quality control coach and a veteran college assistant, to serve as assistant special teams coach.[8] However, the team parted ways with Davis prior to the season.[9]
Jake Peetz, who had spent the previous two seasons as an offensive assistant with the Rams (including last season as pass game specialist), was hired by the Seattle Seahawks as their new pass game coordinator.[10]
John Streicher, previously the director of football administration with the Tennessee Titans, joined the Rams staff with a new title of coordinator of football strategy.[11]
Dave Ragone, who had served as offensive coordinator with the Atlanta Falcons for the last three seasons, was hired as the Rams quarterback coach.[12] The Rams also brought on board Nathan Scheelhaase, a longtime offensive assistant at Iowa State, as pass game specialist.[13] Both positions had been previously held by Zac Robinson.
Greg Williams joined the Rams coaching staff as inside linebackers coach.[14]
On March 8, 2024, the Rams announced they had hired Jerry Schuplinski to serve as a senior offensive assistant.[16]
On September 2, 2024, the Rams announced the hiring of former Nebraska and UCF head coach Scott Frost as a senior football analyst, helping with offense, defense, and special teams.[17]
After holding training camp for the first time at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, the Rams conducted the remainder of preseason practices at Cal Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks, where the team had operated its temporary training facility since 2016 when the franchise relocated from St. Louis. This was necessitated due to delays in the construction of the Kroenke Warner Center complex in Woodland Hills.[18] Following the end of the preseason, the Rams began conducting practices at their new permanent facility.[19]
^The Carolina Panthers traded a second- (39th overall) round selection to the Rams in exchange for 2024 second-(52nd overall) and fifth-(155th overall) selections, and a 2025 second-round selection.[20]
^The Pittsburgh Steelers traded Kevin Dotson, a 2024 fifth-(155th overall) round and 2025 sixth-round selection to the Rams in exchange for 2024 fourth-(120th overall) round and 2025 fifth-round selection.[21]
For the Rams' exhibition matchup against the Chargers, assistant head coach/pass game coordinator Aubrey Pleasant served as head coach, calling plays and making decisions from the sideline while Sean McVay watched the game from the coach's booth.
LAR – Joshua Karty 41-yard field goal, 4:50. Rams 3–0. Drive: 13 plays, 67 yards, 6:30.
Second quarter
DET – Jake Bates 25-yard field goal, 12:17. Tied 3–3. Drive: 15 plays, 63 yards, 7:33.
DET – Jahmyr Gibbs 1-yard run (Jake Bates kick), 1:57. Lions 10–3. Drive: 9 plays, 77 yards, 4:34.
Third quarter
DET – Jameson Williams 52-yard pass from Jared Goff (Jake Bates kick), 10:29. Lions 17–3. Drive: 3 plays, 59 yards, 1:32.
LAR – Kyren Williams 2-yard run (Joshua Karty kick), 3:33. Lions 17–10. Drive: 11 plays, 70 yards, 6:56.
Fourth quarter
LAR – Joshua Karty 26-yard field goal, 12:32. Lions 17–13. Drive: 7 plays, 76 yards, 3:59.
LAR – Cooper Kupp 9-yard pass from Matthew Stafford (Joshua Karty kick), 4:30. Rams 20–17. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 4:39.
DET – Jake Bates 32-yard field goal, 0:17. Tied 20–20. Drive: 9 plays, 55 yards, 1:54.
Overtime
DET – David Montgomery 1-yard run, 5:19. Lions 26–20. Drive: 8 plays, 70 yards, 4:41.
Top passers
LAR – Matthew Stafford – 34/49, 317 yards, TD, INT
DET – Jared Goff – 18/28, 217 yards, TD, INT
Top rushers
LAR – Kyren Williams – 18 rushes, 50 yards, TD
DET – David Montgomery – 17 rushes, 91 yards, TD
Top receivers
LAR – Cooper Kupp – 14 receptions, 110 yards, TD
DET – Jameson Williams – 5 receptions, 121 yards, TD
In a rematch of a 2023 Wild Card Round game, the Rams overcame a rash of injuries to rally for a 20–17 lead late in the fourth quarter before falling to the host Lions in overtime on Sunday Night Football at Ford Field. Wide receiver Cooper Kupp tied a single game career-high with 14 receptions for 110 yards, including a 9-yard touchdown from quarterback Matthew Stafford with 4:30 remaining that put Los Angeles in the lead for the first time on the night. Stafford completed 34 of 49 passes for 317 yards while wide receiver Tyler Johnson caught five passes for 79 yards. However, second-year wide receiver Puka Nacua left the game in the second quarter after catching four passes for 35 yards and did not return. Offensively, running back Kyren Williams had 18 carries for 50 yards with a 1-yard TD run but the Rams offensive line, already down two starters prior to the game, lost two more when left guard Steve Avila and left tackle Joe Noteboom were both injured and knocked out of the game. On defense, Rams safety Quentin Lake led the Rams with 10 tackles while fellow safety John Johnson had an interception. Linebackers Byron Young and Jared Verse (a rookie) each had four tackles and a sack in the loss.
ARI – Marvin Harrison Jr. – 4 receptions, 130 yards, 2 TD
Los Angeles fell to 0–2 for the first time in the Sean McVay era (and first time since 2011 when the franchise was based in St. Louis) as the host Cardinals scored touchdowns on their first three offensive possessions on the way to a 24–3 halftime lead. Arizona got its first win over the Rams franchise at State Farm Stadium since 2014, a streak that reached nine games. Cardinals rookie wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. caught four passes for 130 yards and scored twice in the first period, while his quarterback Kyler Murray completed 17 of 21 passes for 266 yards and three touchdowns and a perfect passer rating while also scoring on a 4-yard TD run in the third period. Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford completed 19 of 27 passes for 216 yards but was sacked five times as Los Angeles never recovered from the big early deficit. Running back Kyren Williams (nine carries, 28 yards) scored L.A.'s only touchdown on a 4-yard run in the third quarter as the Rams were held to just 53 rushing yards. Linebacker Jared Verse had seven tackles and forced a fumble that was recovered by fellow rookie defensive tackle Braden Fiske for the Rams.
Down by 10 midway through the fourth quarter, the Rams rallied for three unanswered scores, the last coming with rookie kicker Joshua Karty converting a 37-yard field goal with two seconds remaining to secure L.A.'s first victory of the season. The home-opening win was also the Rams' first-ever regular season victory over the rival 49ers at SoFi Stadium after losses in the previous four seasons (not including L.A.'s victory over San Francisco in the 2021NFC Championship Game) and their first home regular season win over the 49ers since 2018. Rams running back Kyren Williams ran for 89 yards and two touchdowns on 24 carries and caught two passes for 27 yards, one of which was a 15-yard touchdown reception in which Williams somersaulted over 49er strong safety Talanoa Hufanga at the goal line in the second quarter for L.A.'s first points. Quarterback Matthew Stafford completed 16 of 26 passes for 221 yards and earned the 36th fourth quarter comeback win of his career. Wide receiver Tutu Atwell had four receptions for 93 yards for the Rams, including a 50-yard catch with under three minutes remaining that set up Williams' game tying score. Free safety Quentin Lake and linebackers Troy Reeder and Christian Rozeboom had 10 total tackles each to share the lead for the Rams, who avoided their worst start since 2011 when the team opened with six straight losses.
The Rams fell to 1-3 in a defensive battle at Soldier Field, where the franchise last won in 2003. Los Angeles took a 6-0 lead on a pair of field goals (46, 37) by rookie kicker Joshua Karty, but the host Bears went ahead in the second quarter after a strip sack of quarterback Matthew Stafford led to a 1-yard touchdown run by Chicago running back Roschon Johnson. Karty converted two more field goals (25, 52) in the second half, converting four of five attempts on the day. Running back Kyren Williams had 94 yards on 19 carries with a 1-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter. Stafford completed 20 of 29 passes for 224 yards but was sacked three times and threw an interception on L.A.'s final possession. Wide receivers Tutu Atwell (four receptions, 82 yards) and Jordan Whittington (six receptions, 62 yards) also contributed to the Rams' offensive effort. Defensively, linebacker Christian Rozeboom led the Rams with 11 total tackles while rookie defensive tackle Braden Fiske earned his first career sack, one of three by L.A.'s defense on Bears rookie quarterback Caleb Williams.
Kyren Williams ran for 102 yards and a touchdown, but a pair of turnovers allowed the visiting Packers to take the lead and a late comeback attempt fell short as the Rams fell to 1-4. With the game tied at 7-7, the Rams took the lead when linebacker Byron Young hit Green Bay quarterback Jordan Love in the end zone. As he fell down, Love attempted to throw his pass away to avoid a safety, but the ball was intercepted at the Packer 4 by rookie defensive back Jaylen McCollough and returned for a touchdown. Williams scored on a 1-yard run midway through the second quarter (his eighth straight regular season game with a rushing TD), but his fumble in Packers territory on L.A.'s opening drive of the third quarter led directly to a Green Bay touchdown. Quarterback Matthew Stafford then threw an interception that the Packers capitalized on with another touchdown to take a 24-13 lead. Stafford completed 29 of 45 passes for 260 yards on the day and rallied the Rams in the fourth quarter with a 1-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demarcus Robinson to close the score to within 24-19. After the L.A. defense forced Green Bay to punt with just under three minutes left, Stafford guided the Rams across midfield but a sack and an incomplete pass ended L.A.'s final drive at the Packer 38 with 1:03 remaining. Rookie wide receiver Jordan Whittington caught a team-high seven passes for 89 yards while defensive end Kobie Turner had two sacks on the day while sharing the team lead in tackles (five) with safety Quentin Lake.
Coming off the bye week, a strong defensive effort kept the visiting Raiders out of the end zone as the Rams got their second victory of the season. Strong safety Kamren Curl recovered a fumble and returned it 33 yards for a touchdown to build a 14-6 lead for Los Angeles. Following a scoreless first quarter, Las Vegas took its only lead of the game on the first of five field goals by kicker Daniel Carlson. Rams running back Kyren Williams put the Rams ahead with a 13-yard touchdown run with three minutes remaining in the second period, the score being set up by an interception by cornerback Cobie Durant. On the Raiders' next possession, Durant sacked Las Vegas quarterback Gardner Minshew and forced a fumble which was picked up by Curl who took it back for a TD. Durant was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week for his performance in the game. Williams (21 carries, 76 yards) scored his second touchdown of the game on a 2-yard run midway through the third quarter, with this opportunity set up by rookie safety Jaylen McCollough's interception of a Minshew pass. McCollough intercepted a second pass with under 90 seconds remaining to seal the Rams' victory. Inside linebacker Troy Reeder and free safety Quentin Lake shared the team lead in tackles with nine each.
The host Rams claimed their second victory in five days, pulling away from the Vikings in the second half to improve to 3-4 on the season. Quarterback Matthew Stafford had his strongest game of the season with 279 passing yards and four touchdown passes. Bolstered by the return of previously injured wide receivers Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp, Los Angeles matched Minnesota touchdown for touchdown in the first half, which ended with a 14-14 score. Stafford's first TD pass came on a 5-yard pass play over the middle to running back Kyren Williams in the opening period, while the second came early in the second quarter as Stafford ducked under a ferocious Vikings pass rush before firing a pass to a sliding Kupp in the back of the end zone to tie the game. Stafford, who completed 25 of 34 passes and was not sacked, found wide receiver Demarcus Robinson for touchdowns in the third and fourth quarters. Williams added 97 rushing yards on 23 carries while scoring a TD for the 14th straight game, while Nacua made his first start since the season opener and caught seven passes for 106 yards. Defensively, the Rams held Minnesota to just a pair of field goals in the second half and sacked Vikings quarterback Sam Darnold three times, the last coming when linebacker Byron Young corralled Darnold in the end zone with 1:36 remaining in the game to seal the victory.
Quarterback Matthew Stafford's 39-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demarcus Robinson with 4:57 remaining in overtime gave Los Angeles the victory in a wild NFC West battle at Lumen Field. Following a scoreless first quarter, the Rams took a 3-0 lead on a 38-yard field goal by rookie kicker Joshua Karty but host Seattle rallied to take a 13-3 halftime lead with two touchdown passes by quarterback Geno Smith. Robinson and Stafford connected on a 1-yard touchdown pass to finish off an 11-play, 75-yard drive to start the second half, while Karty converted a second field goal from 21 yards out to tie the score at 13-13. The Rams retook the lead when rookie free safety Kamren Kinchens intercepted Smith in the end zone and returned it 103 yards for a touchdown and a 20-13 Rams advantage. The interception return was the longest in Rams franchise history, breaking the previous record shared by Johnnie Johnson (1980 vs. Green Bay) and Janoris Jenkins (2014 vs. San Diego). Host Seattle rallied to tie the score in the final minute of regulation, then (after winning the coin toss) drove 56 yards in six plays to set up a fourth-and-1 at the L.A. 16. But Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker III was swarmed by the Rams defense for no gain, forcing a turnover on downs. After driving the team 44 yards in three plays to set up second-and-6 at the Seahawks 39, Stafford rolled out to his left and lofted a deep pass to the end zone, where Robinson beat the coverage of Seattle cornerback Riq Woolen and gathered in the game-winning touchdown reception with one hand. Robinson caught a season-high six receptions for 94 yards and two TDs while fellow wide receiver Cooper Kupp caught 11 passes for 104 yards and Stafford completed 25 of 44 passes for 298 yards. Defensively, Kinchens had three tackles and a fumble recovery along with another interception in the fourth quarter that thwarted a Seahawks scoring opportunity, and was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week. Rookie defensive tackle Braden Fiske had two sacks while linebacker Christian Rozeboom led L.A. with 11 total tackles and the Rams collected seven total sacks as they evened their season record to 4-4.
TV announcers (KCOP): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and Lisa Salters Game exclusive to KCOP through syndication. Out of market on ESPN, blacked out in Los Angeles and Miami.
The Rams sputtered offensively and were held out of the end zone by the visiting Dolphins on Monday Night Football to end a three-game winning streak. Rookie kicker Joshua Karty converted five of six field goal attempts (two in the second quarter, three in the fourth) to account for L.A.'s scoring, but Miami took the lead on the game's opening drive and never lost their advantage. Quarterback Matthew Stafford completed 32 of 46 passes for 293 yards with an interception, while wide receiver Puka Nacua had nine receptions for 98 yards. Rookie inside linebacker Omar Speights recorded a team-high eight tackles while fellow rookie outside linebacker Jared Verse added four total tackles including a sack and a forced fumble.
Quarterback Matthew Stafford threw four touchdown passes as the Rams overcame another slow start to put away the host Patriots and improve to 5-5 on the season. Wide receivers Cooper Kupp (six receptions, 106 yards) and Puka Nacua (seven receptions, 123 yards) both caught TDs from Stafford in the second quarter as the Rams took a 14-10 halftime lead. Kupp caught a 69-yard scoring pass from Stafford on the second play of the third period, while tight end Colby Parkinson scored on a 19-yard TD later in the quarter. Running back Kyren Williams added 86 rushing yards on 15 carries while the Rams committed no turnovers and did not give up a sack on offense. Safety Quentin Lake and linebacker Christian Rozeboom shared the team lead in total tackles with 11 each, while rookie defensive tackle Braden Fiske had two of L.A.'s three sacks along with a forced fumble. Rookie safety Kamren Kinchens was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week for the second time in three weeks after recording eight tackles, an interception and a forced fumble.
The visiting Eagles broke open a close game in the second half and claimed their sixth straight road win against the Rams franchise dating back to 2004. Los Angeles took the opening kickoff and drove 53 yards in five plays down to the Philadelphia 17 when running back Kyren Williams fumbled the ball. After the Eagles converted the turnover into a field goal, Los Angeles rebounded with a 70-yard drive in nine plays capped off by a 1-yard TD run by Williams. But the Eagles took control of the game, outscoring the Rams 34-7 as running back Saquon Barkley ran for a career-high 255 yards, including touchdown runs of 70 and 72 yards in the second half on the way to victory. Matthew Stafford threw for 243 yards and touchdown passes to Demarcus Robinson and Cooper Kupp, while wide receiver Puka Nacua led the team with nine receptions for 117 yards, and Williams had 16 carries for 72 yards on the ground. Linebacker Christian Rozeboom led the Rams in tackles with 12, while defensive tackle Braden Fiske had two tackles for loss, including a sack.
Despite being shut out in the first half for the first time in the regular season as head coach, Sean McVay guided his team back with a strong performance in the final two periods to again even the Rams' record to .500 (6-6). In the process, McVay became the Rams' all-time winningest head coach during the regular season with his 76th victory, surpassing John Robinson, who coached the Rams from 1983 to 1991 (McVay had surpassed Robinson for overall team victories in the Rams' Week 8 victory against Minnesota). Though New Orleans ran 40 plays to L.A.'s 23 and dominated time of possession (18:41 to 11:19), the Rams defense held strong and limited the Saints to only a pair of field goals. Running back Kyren Williams ran the ball seven times for 37 yards on L.A.'s opening drive of the third quarter, a 10-play, 70-yard march that ended with Williams scoring on a 4-yard run. Williams finished the day with 104 yards on 15 carries. Quarterback Matthew Stafford found wide receiver Demarcus Robinson on a deep route for a 46-yard gain on the final player of the third quarter, then on the first play of the fourth period, Stafford and Robinson connected again for a 3-yard TD pass. After the Saints tied the score on their next possession, the Rams answered as Jordan Whittington's 43-yard kickoff return to near midfield would ultimately lead to Stafford's second touchdown pass of the day, a 7-yard strike to wide receiver Puka Nacua, who had a team-high five receptions for 56 yards. With just under nine minutes remaining in the game, the Saints mounted a 14-play, 61-yard drive that reached to the Rams 9-yard line. On fourth-and-3, defensive end Jared Verse forced New Orleans quarterback Derek Carr into an incomplete pass with 1:09 remaining, and L.A. was able to run out the clock. Inside linebackers Christian Rozeboom (12) and Omar Speights (10) were the team's leading tacklers, while Verse was credited with five tackles along with three quarterback pressures.
LAR – Puka Nacua 19-yard pass from Matthew Stafford (kick failed), 1:54. Rams 44–35. Drive: 11 plays, 71 yards, 6:55.
BUF – Josh Allen 1-yard run (Tyler Bass kick), 1:00. Rams 44–42. Drive: 8 plays, 70 yards, 0:54.
Top passers
BUF – Josh Allen – 22/37, 342 yards, 3 TD
LAR – Matthew Stafford – 23/30, 320 yards, 2 TD
Top rushers
BUF – Josh Allen – 10 rushes, 82 yards, 3 TD
LAR – Kyren Williams – 29 rushes, 87 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
BUF – Khalil Shakir – 5 receptions, 106 yards, TD
LAR – Puka Nacua – 12 receptions, 162 yards, TD
Wide receiver Puka Nacua caught 12 passes for 162 yards and his 19-yard catch-and-run midway through the fourth quarter proved to be the winning points as the host Rams held off the visiting Bills to go above .500 for the first time in the season while ending Buffalo's seven-game winning streak. Los Angeles never trailed and grabbed the early lead by taking the opening kickoff and marching 70 yards in 12 plays, the last one being a 3-yard scoring run by running back Kyren Williams. After Buffalo tied the game on a 1-yard TD run by quarterback Josh Allen, the Rams responded with a 22-yard field goal by kicker Joshua Karty early in the second quarter and a 10-7 lead. Forcing Buffalo to punt, the kick attempt was blocked by Jake Hummel and the ball was then picked up by Hunter Long who returned it 22 yards for a touchdown. Nacua, who carried the ball a career-high five times for 16 yards, scored on a 4-yard run off a jet sweep late in the second quarter to finish off an 86-yard drive as the Rams took a 24-14 halftime lead. Los Angeles kept up its momentum in the second half with another 86-yard drive that ended with a 7-yard TD run by Williams (29 attempts, 87 yards), who surpassed 1,000 rushing yards for the second straight season. L.A. scored on its next drive with quarterback Matthew Stafford finding wide receiver Cooper Kupp over the middle for a diving TD catch over two Bills defenders to put the Rams up 38-21. But Allen led the Bills back with a TD pass and a TD run to close to within 38-35. Stafford, who completed 23 of 30 passes for 320 yards in the game, went six-for-seven for 66 yards on the drive, and got the final 19 by hitting Nacua on a short hook pass. Then, picking up a key block from Kupp, Nacua accelerated toward the end zone for the clinching score with 1:54 remaining. Though the Rams defense gave up one more touchdown run to Allen (who became the first person in NFL history to run for three TDs and pass for three TDs in the same game) with 1:02 remaining, a key play was made one snap earlier when Allen was stopped on his first attempt at a quarterback sneak from the 1-yard line on first-and-goal by linebacker Omar Speights. The stop forced Buffalo to use one of its timeouts, and after the ball was recovered during the onside kick attempt by Ronnie Rivers, L.A. was able to run down the clock until just seven seconds were left. On fourth-and-7 from the Bills 42, Rams punter Ethan Evans got away his final kick which landed in the end zone as time ran out. The win was head coach Sean McVay's first over Buffalo after two previous losses in 2020 and 2022, and was the first home victory by the Rams franchise against the Bills since 1983.
TV announcers (KTTV/Prime Video): Al Michaels, Kirk Herbstreit and Kaylee Hartung Game exclusive to KTTV through syndication. Out of market on Prime Video.
Rookie kicker Joshua Karty converted four field goal attempts, including three in the fourth quarter as the Rams prevailed in a tough defensive battle at Levi's Stadium to earn their first sweep of their NFC West rivals since the 2018 season. Playing four days after scoring 44 points, Los Angeles sputtered offensively in the first quarter, punting four times with no first downs and only 23 yards. San Francisco took an early lead with a 53-yard field goal by kicker Jake Moody, but the Rams defense held the 49ers to just 20 rushing yards in the first half and a sack by defensive tackle Kobie Turner forced a punt. Taking over at midfield, the Rams were led by running back Kyren Williams who had four carries for 13 yards down to the 49er 30 to set up Karty's first field goal attempt, which was successful from 48 yards out. Following a second field goal by Moody in the third quarter, the Rams answered with a 16-play drive that pushed all the way to the San Francisco 2-yard line, but penalties stalled the effort and Karty tied the score with a 23-yard field goal. After the defense held the 49ers to a three-and-out, Los Angeles struck back as quarterback Matthew Stafford came up with the biggest offensive play of the night with a 52-yard deep pass to wide receiver Puka Nacua that led to Karty's third field goal, a 27-yard attempt that gave L.A. its first lead. Cornerback Darious Williams intercepted a Brock Purdy pass in the end zone with 5:14 remaining in the game, which led to the Rams closing out the game with a 13-play, 69-yard drive that ended with a fourth Karty field goal from 29 yards out. Kyren Williams totaled 29 carries for 108 hard-earned rushing yards while Nacua had seven receptions for 97 yards. Linebacker Christian Rozeboom had nine total tackles including a sack while defensive tackle Turner had two sacks in the game, which was L.A.'s seventh victory in the last nine weeks since ending the bye week with a 1-4 record. Nacua had seven receptions for 97 yards to lead the Rams' offense.
With key defensive stops and a methodical approach on offense, the Rams clinched a winning season for the seventh time in eight seasons under head coach Sean McVay, who got his first-ever victory against the Jets. Running back Kyren Williams powered his way to 122 rushing yards on 23 carries and scored on a 2-yard run midway through the second quarter to tie the score at 6-6. Host New York drove 67 yards in 15 plays to the Rams' 3-yard line late in the second quarter, but L.A.'s defense held the Jets to a field goal. New York again mounted a long drive that covered 78 yards in 14 plays and consumed 9 minutes, 45 seconds to start the third quarter, but the Rams defense again stiffened and forced the Jets to turn over the ball on downs at the L.A. 13. The Rams responded with a 13-play, 59-yard possession that ended with a 38-yard field goal by kicker Joshua Karty early in the fourth quarter. On the next drive, Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers was sacked on a corner blitz by Kamren Curl who forced a fumble that was recovered by linebacker Jared Verse at the New York 21. After two runs by Williams moved the ball to the Jets 11, quarterback Matthew Stafford found Tyler Higbee open on a delay route, and the veteran tight end (seeing his first action of the season after recovering from a torn ACL) dived into the end zone for touchdown and a 16-9 Rams lead. Karty added another field goal on L.A.'s next possession and with less than two minutes remaining, Jordan Whittington recovered a muffed punt return by the Jets and the Rams were able to run out the clock. Rookie strong safety Jaylen McCollough led the Rams in tackles with nine while linebacker Christian Rozeboom had eight. Offensively, Stafford completed 14 of 19 passes for 110 yards with a touchdown and an interception, but was not sacked for the third straight game, while wide receiver Puka Nacua led the team in receiving with eight receptions for 56 yards.
^ abDetroit wins tie break over Minnesota based on head-to-head victory.
^ abAtlanta wins tie break over Tampa Bay based on head-to-head sweep.
^ abDallas wins tie break over Arizona based on conference record.
^When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest-ranked remaining team from each division.
Legend
w — Clinched wild card
x — Clinched playoff berth
y — Clinched division
z — Clinched first-round bye and home-field advantage