Los Angeles Times

McVay refuses to reveal who will start at quarterbac­k for the Rams.

Rams coach puts off quarterbac­k decision until after he sees Goff in practice.

- By Gary Klein

Who will start at quarterbac­k for the Rams in Saturday’s NFC wild- card playoff game against the Seattle Seahawks remains unclear.

The only certainty is that coach Sean McVay will not say if it will be Jared Goff, who continues to recover from thumb surgery, or if he will once again turn to John Wolford.

“I’m not going to make an announceme­nt on who’s starting and who’s not,” McVay said Tuesday during a videoconfe­rence with reporters. “So, I’m not going to answer that question this week.”

McVay’s strategy is part gamesmansh­ip, but it also is rooted in reality.

Goff sat out Sunday’s season finale against the Arizona Cardinals after undergoing surgery for a broken right thumb suffered during a Dec. 27 loss to the Seahawks. Wolford started in his place and helped lead the Rams to an 18- 7 victory that put them in the playoffs for the third time in four seasons under McVay.

Last week, McVay said Goff opted to have surgery with the thought he would be ready for a playoff game. But McVay hedged Tuesday.

“I probably should have said there’s a possibilit­y that he’ll be ready to go as soon as the playoffs,” McVay said. “Now whether that’s for sure or not, that’s probably a more accurate way that I could have answered that question.”

Goff has “thrown a couple balls” and would have taken snaps if the Rams had conducted a walkthroug­h Tuesday, McVay said. But the Rams held only virtual meetings. They are scheduled to practice Wednesday and Thursday in preparatio­n for their third game this season against the NFC West- champion Seahawks.

Goff, the No. 1 pick in the 2016 NFL draft, led the Rams to the playoffs in the 2017 season and to the Super Bowl in 2018. This season, he passed for 20 touchdowns with 13 intercepti­ons in 15 starts.

The Rams signed Wolford before last season after he played eight games in the defunct Alliance of American Football. Against the Cardinals — in his first NFL regular- season game — Wolford completed 22 of 38 passes for 231 yards with an intercepti­on. He also rushed for a team- best 56 yards.

“Jared is our starting quarterbac­k — the reality is that he had a thumb surgery,” McVay said. “We’re monitoring that every single day, and that’s something we’re taking a day at a time, but the anticipati­on is both those guys are getting themselves ready to go.”

A determinat­ion about who will start will not be made until McVay evaluates Goff during workouts.

“The first thing is let’s see how his thumb is, let’s see what that thing feels like,” McVay said. “The good thing is that you know you’ve got a guy that’s won a lot of games, taken us to a Super Bowl and done a lot of great things over his career in Jared.

“And then with John having had his f irst experience in an NFL game, I did like a lot of the things that he did the other day. That gives you some f lexibility with how you handle this week.”

McVay said the Rams wouldn’t put Goff “in harm’s way” if there was risk of longterm injury. He said surgery was performed to provide stability to Goff ’s thumb. During practices, Goff will test functional­ity, f lexibility and mobility, McVay said.

“You just want to be able to see and evaluate, all right, when he’s getting out there in a practice setting, what does that look like,” McVay said. “Get his feedback on how it feels because playing the position and then being able to just kind of play catch and long toss is a little bit different.”

Is there a scenario in which McVay would play both Goff and Wolford?

“I wouldn’t rule out anything at this point,” McVay said.

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said there would be no difference in his team’s preparatio­n regardless of knowing who would start for the Rams. Carroll said he did not see a difference in the Rams’ offense with Wolford.

“It looks like the same offense to me,” he said. “With just playing, they’ve run all of the same plays. He did a nice job of keeping the ball on some reads and all that, so I don’t think it was much different.”

After the victory over the Cardinals, Wolford was asked whether he would be disappoint­ed to be back on the sideline as Goff ’s backup.

“No. I’m here to do a job,” he said. “I have no idea where he’s at. I’m just trying to enjoy this win, and then I’ll put my head down and work on Seattle.”

So, Wolford will be ready if comes down to a gametime decision.

Kickoff is 1: 40 p. m. Asked whether there was a timetable to decide who will start, McVay gave a clipped answer.

“Yeah,” he said. “Saturday at 1: 39.”

Etc.

Wide receiver Cooper Kupp and defensive lineman Michael Brockers, who sat out against Arizona because they were on the reserve/ COVID- 19 list, are expected to be available against Seattle “as long as they continue to stay on the progressio­n that they’re on right now,” McVay said. ... Left tackle Joe Noteboom ( neck) and right guard David Edwards ( ankle) would have been out or limited if the Rams had practiced Tuesday, McVay said. Veteran left tackle Andrew Whitworth, who has been out since suffering a knee injury in a Nov. 15 win over the Seahawks, practiced last week and could be available Saturday.

 ?? Elaine Thompson Associated Press ?? AFTER JARED GOFF broke his thumb in the Rams’ loss at Seattle on Dec. 27, Sean McVay said he would be ready for the playoffs. The coach said Tuesday he hadn’t decided who would start against the Seahawks.
Elaine Thompson Associated Press AFTER JARED GOFF broke his thumb in the Rams’ loss at Seattle on Dec. 27, Sean McVay said he would be ready for the playoffs. The coach said Tuesday he hadn’t decided who would start against the Seahawks.

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