Daily Press

Rams could lose Goff for Cards game

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The Rams’ sputtering offense is the biggest culprit in their slide from the top of the NFC West to the brink of missing the playoffs.

In fact, the unit is so ineffectiv­e that it’s unclear whether the injury absence of its starting quarterbac­k and its leading rusher would hurt or help.

Jared Goff and Darrell Henderson could both miss Los Angeles’ regular-season finale against Arizona on Sunday.

Los Angeles (9-6), which led the division before its first two-game skid of the season, will miss the playoffs if it loses to the Cardinals and the Bears beat the Packers. Goff injured his thumb in the Rams’ 20-9 loss at Seattle last Sunday, while Henderson hurt his ankle. The Rams already were without their second-leading rusher, rookie Cam Akers, who sprained his ankle a week earlier.

Goff reportedly had surgery Monday on his thumb.

But the injuries don’t cover the depth and breadth of everything going wrong with coach Sean McVay’s offense, which couldn’t score a touchdown despite gaining 334 yards against the Seahawks.

The Rams are seventh in the NFL with just under 380 yards per game, yet they’re 17th in the league with only 23.6 points per game. LA has moved the ball well occasional­ly in December, but with nothing like the flair and consistenc­y of a Super Bowl contender, let alone the Rams’ units from 2017 and 2018.

“We’ve had opportunit­ies the last two weeks to punch our ticket to the playoffs, and unfortunat­ely we haven’t played well enough to do that,” center Austin Blythe said Monday. “Luckily we put ourselves in a position early in the year where these games matter, and we still control our own fate. We’re going to be working hard this week.”

What’s working: The Rams’ defense is still solid after holding Seattle to 292 yards and 14 fewer plays than LA. The group is No. 1 in the league in yards allowed (286.5) and third in points (19.3). It wasn’t totally dominant against the Seahawks, who made two second-half TD drives. Sebastian Joseph-Day also lamented its inability to force a turnover, but McVay couldn’t realistica­lly ask for much more than coordinato­r Brandon Staley’s group is giving.

What needs help: Explosive plays. The offense averaged only 4.5 yards per snap, and it didn’t have an offensive play longer than one 26-yard catch by Josh Reynolds. McVay and Goff rarely throw the ball deep, and they’re rarely successful when they do. Without Akers’ breakaway speed in the backfield, Los Angeles has little capacity for game-changing plays.

Stock up: LB Leonard Floyd. The veteran who joined the Rams on a one-year contract sacked Russell Wilson twice to give himself 9 ½ sacks this season, eighth in the NFL. He’s fully capitalizi­ng on the chance to play next to Aaron Donald, and the reward is likely a big payday next spring.

Stock down: The Rams gave the ball away only once against Seattle, but it was an atrocious intercepti­on that Goff called “really dumb.” Otherwise, Goff and his receivers were unable to do much against the NFL’s worst pass defense, managing just 216 net yards passing despite several big catches by Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods. Goff’s offensive line also wasn’t dominant against the Seahawks’ normally unimpressi­ve pass rush, allowing three sacks and 10 quarterbac­k hurries.

Injured: Goff has never missed a game due to injury in his five-year NFL career. Henderson hasn’t missed a game this season.

Key number: 0 — The number of NFL snaps taken by Goff ’s backup, John Wolford. He excelled in a minor league in 2019 after leaving Wake Forest in 2017, but the fleet-footed, 6-foot-1 passer hasn’t received any playing time from McVay in two years, even late in a handful of comfortabl­e wins this season.

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