The Standard (St. Catharines)

Rams make long-awaited playoff return vs. tested Falcons

- GREG BEACHAM

LOS ANGELES — Matt Ryan and the Atlanta Falcons visited the Coliseum late last season on their path to the Super Bowl, and they easily racked up a blowout victory over the woebegone Los Angeles Rams.

When they return on Saturday night for their NFC wild-card playoff opener, they might hardly recognize the guys in the horned helmets on the other sideline.

That 42-14 loss to the Falcons was a catalyst in the Rams’ transforma­tion from LA laughingst­ocks into NFC West champions, because coach Jeff Fisher was fired the next day. One month later, Sean McVay was hired to lead the most incredible one-year turnaround in recent NFL history.

“People are excited, and that was our goal when we came back here,” McVay said. “We wanted to be able to provide a good football product that our fans can be proud of, and they want to come out and support.”

Led by the 31-year-old McVay, who grew up near Atlanta, and a roster of playmakers including Jared Goff, Todd Gurley and Aaron Donald, the Rams (11-5) are in the playoffs for the first time in 13 years. The NFC’s third seed drew a tough matchup with 2016 league MVP Ryan and the Falcons (10-6), who appear capable of making another conference run.

But the Rams expect to feed off the excitement of a city hosting its first playoff game since the LA Raiders’ last post-season trip 24 years ago.

“It’s definitely a cool thing,” Goff said. “After football has been gone from here for so long, and we come back in Year 2 and are able to bring a playoff game to the Coliseum, that’s very cool.”

Goff, the second-year pro coming off a transforma­tive 3,804yard season, is eager to face off with Ryan, who is in the playoffs for the sixth time in 10 years. Both teams have a wealth of offensive playmakers, from Rams MVP candidate Gurley to star Falcons receiver Julio Jones.

The Falcons are back for their first post-season game since that memorable Super Bowl collapse against New England. That loss could have broken weaker teams, but coach Dan Quinn kept this bunch together — and now they’re the only group in the six-team NFC field that also made the playoffs last season.

“I love the resiliency and the toughness of this team,” Quinn said. “When you’ve been through some of the fire together and you come out the other side stronger as a brotherhoo­d, we’re certainly improved.”

Here are more things to watch when the Rams host their first playoff game in Southern California since January 1986:

Big numbers

Although both defences are statistica­lly solid, this game could turn into a shootout. The Falcons led the NFL in scoring last season, but the Rams took over the top spot this year in McVay’s worst-to-first revitaliza­tion of the LA offence. Ryan and Jones have the skills to pick at the Rams’ secondary if Donald can’t be disruptive, while Goff and the versatile Gurley are eager to make their first mark on postseason football.

New guys

While the Falcons know everything about playoff pressure, the Rams seriously lack experience: Just six of their players have been in post-season games — including star left tackle Andrew Whitworth, who went 0-6 in Cincinnati. McVay also is the youngest head coach in a playoff game in NFL history.

Connection­s

The teams’ coaching staffs have multiple ties and similariti­es. Rams offensive co-ordinator Matt LaFleur was Ryan’s quarterbac­ks coach last year, although LaFleur claimed he doesn’t have much insight to offer on the star passer or the Falcons’ offence. That offence is run by Steve Sarkisian, who knows the Coliseum extremely well: He coached at USC as an assistant and a head coach until getting fired midway through the 2015 season. Rams GM Les Snead and assistant Brian Xanders are products of the Falcons’ front office, too.

Time off

The Rams didn’t earn a firstround bye, but McVay essentiall­y took one anyway by resting his biggest playmakers for last week’s regular-season finale. The decision likely cost Gurley the NFL rushing title, but should pay off with rested skill-position players. In the ultracompe­titive NFC South, the Falcons had to grind into the final week to secure a wild-card spot with a 22-10 win over Carolina.

 ?? MARK ZALESKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Los Angeles Rams are a team transforme­d as quarterbac­k Jared Goff leads them into the first playoff game in 13 years against Atlanta on Saturday.
MARK ZALESKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Los Angeles Rams are a team transforme­d as quarterbac­k Jared Goff leads them into the first playoff game in 13 years against Atlanta on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada