The Norwalk Hour

Darnold comes home to face vaunted Rams D

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. — While Sam Darnold is back home on the West Coast this weekend, he’ll undoubtedl­y think back to the days when he was a college superstar bound for NFL success, not a beleaguere­d pro quarterbac­k trying to hang on to his job with a winless team.

Those days were actually less than three years ago. That’s when Darnold left Southern California to become the savior of the New York Jets — and almost nothing since then has gone according to script.

The Orange County native returns to Los Angeles leading the NFL’s worst offense for an 0-13 team that has to face the NFC West-leading Los Angeles Rams (9-4), who have the league’s best defense.

Darnold isn’t playing great for a coaching staff that seems unlikely to be around next year, when the Jets could choose Trevor Lawrence or another top quarterbac­k with their high draft pick.

No, Darnold’s first trip home for the holidays isn’t exactly filled with joy and cheer.

He’s still hoping the Jets can somehow figure out a way to make it festive.

“I was looking forward to going home and seeing some family, if possible,” Darnold said before his first profession­al game in the Los Angeles area, where he led the USC Trojans to a Pac-12 title and a Rose Bowl victory. “Obviously that’s not a thing, but we are looking forward to going there and playing a good team and having the opportunit­y.”

This doesn’t appear to be a great opportunit­y for the Jets, whose franchise-record losing streak stands at 13 games heading into their final three chances to avoid the third 0-16 season in NFL history.

Not much about the matchup at SoFi Stadium suggests this will be New York’s day: The Rams’ phenomenal defense has shut down opponents with much more offensive competence than the woeful Jets, while Los Angeles’ offense has been steadily productive during four wins in the past five games.

Darnold has had three rough games since his return from injury, completing 57.9% of his passes for two touchdowns and three intercepti­ons while getting sacked nine times. The Jets have been outscored 91-34 in those three games, with Darnold twice failing to lead a touchdown drive.

Darnold imagined family and friends in the stands to watch him when he returned home, but he’ll still try to do the improbable for them.

“I have great teammates, great coaches to be able to talk to when things aren’t going well, and I have great friends and great family and a great support system,” Darnold said. “Things haven’t gone necessaril­y the way that I envisioned them, or many people envisioned this year going, so it really is just one day at a time.”

WARY RAMS

The Rams are tied with the Seahawks atop the NFC West, so they can’t afford to take the Jets lightly before a season-defining trip to Seattle next week. Los Angeles can also clinch a playoff berth with a win.

Sean McVay has been full of praise for Darnold, Jets coach Adam Gase and the New York defense all week. His Rams were shown film of the Jets’ near-miss two weeks ago against the Raiders, and were then reminded that the Raiders beat the Saints and the Chiefs.

“You want to be honest about what’s going on, but … I don’t worry about the maturity of this team to understand the focus and concentrat­ion that’s required every single week, regardless of who the opponent is,” McVay said.

DEFENDING DONALD

The Jets know they’ll have their hands full trying to keep Aaron Donald from blowing things up in the backfield.

“He gets double-teamed a lot, but it doesn’t matter,” Gase said. “The guy is phenomenal at defeating blocks whether one or two guys are on him, whether he’s back-side, front-side of the run. If he’s not the best player in the league, he’s top three. He’s so disruptive.”

Donald leads the NFL with 121⁄ sacks, but that

2 statistic only measures a fraction of his impact for the NFL’s top defense.

FAMILY ISSUES

Rams rookie receiver Van Jefferson will see a familiar face in green: His father, Shawn Jefferson, is the Jets’ receivers coach.

The younger Jefferson has just 15 catches for 170 yards this season for Los Angeles, but could be auditionin­g for a bigger role next season if Josh Reynolds leaves as a free agent after the best season of his pro career.

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