Royal Oak Tribune

Rams deserve spot among NFC’s best

- By Greg Beacham

LOS ANGELES » The Los Angeles Rams celebrated their gritty win Monday night in Tampa Bay with style, going crazy in the locker room with a party so exuberant and so joyously profane that the team’s social media pros decided they couldn’t post the video.

“The locker room is electric right now,” rookie safety Jordan Fuller said after picking off Tom Brady for his first two career intercepti­ons. “It’s just fun being out here.”

The Rams (7- 3) earned that good time in Tampa before their latest six-hour flight home. They look like a genuine Super Bowl contender as they head down the stretch of a season in which they weren’t generally expected to be among the NFC’s elites.

Los Angeles moved atop the NFC West and into the No. 2 spot in the conference’s playoff race with that 27-24 road win over the Buccaneers. The Rams have returned from their bye week with back-to-back victories over fellow NFC contenders Seattle and Tampa Bay, staking their claim as a worthy opponent for New Orleans, Green Bay and the other conference powerhouse­s.

The Rams’ success is remarkable because they’ve overcome everything from a sluggish offense to a string of five East Coast trips in 10 weeks. Although other top teams are more consistent with the ball in their hands, coach Sean McVay’s team is figuring out ways to win — usually with defense.

When Brady and the Bucs took the field down by three points with 2:32 to play, the Rams won with one last stand from a defense that has been remarkable all season long under McVay’s rookie coordinato­r, Brandon Staley.

“I wasn’t nervous,” McVay said of the final drive, which ended with Fuller’s second pick. “I was more confident. Just seeing those guys come through in the clutch was big-time for our team. We’ll enjoy it. We’ve got a lot of things that we’ve got to continue to clean up in a short amount of time.”

Most of that cleanup work is needed on offense, where McVay’s group isn’t producing at the level of the Rams’ past offenses.

The Rams are only 17th in the NFL in points per game (24.3), and they’ve scored more than 30 points only twice. They accomplish­ed that feat nine times in McVay’s rookie season in 2017, and they did it 11 times on the way to the Super Bowl in 2018. They even did it five times last season while going 9-7 and missing the playoffs.

Those numbers won’t matter if the Rams keep relying on the defense and the clutch play that has put them in the thick of the Super Bowl chase.

Just about everything Staley’s group does is working: The Rams are the NFL’s top defense by yards allowed, just 291.9 per game. They held Brady and the Bucs to 251 yards, including just 113 after halftime. Tampa Bay scored only the third touchdown allowed by LA’s defense in the second half of its 10 games, but it was on a short field after Goff’s second intercepti­on. One week after hounding Russell Wilson into a quiet performanc­e, the Rams forced a season-high 22 incompleti­ons by Brady and made everything difficult for the six-time Super Bowl champ. The running game was inept against Tampa Bay’s tough run defense, which exposed flaws in the Rams’ normally solid ground attack. LA had just 37 yards rushing, and top running back Darrell Henderson managed only 5 yards on eight carries.

The Rams didn’t have a first-round pick last spring, and their rookie class hadn’t made much of an impact this season beyond sixth-round safety Fuller’s surprising­ly large role.

 ?? JASON BEHNKEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Los Angeles Rams nose tackle Sebastian Joseph-Day, left, celebrates with defensive end Aaron Donald after the team defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on the road Monday.
JASON BEHNKEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles Rams nose tackle Sebastian Joseph-Day, left, celebrates with defensive end Aaron Donald after the team defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on the road Monday.

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