Los Angeles Times

Rams look to bid farewell to Coliseum on high note

They are facing Arizona as their season, and run at the venue, ends

- By Gary Klein

It took a while for Rams quarterbac­k Jared Goff to experience the joy of victory at the Coliseum.

He lost in his only appearance there while playing in college for California, and he was winless in four home starts as a rookie after the Rams selected him with the No. 1 pick in the 2016 draft.

But Goff has since enjoyed many highlights while directing the Rams to three victories at the historic venue in 2017, seven last season, including one in the playoffs, and three this season.

With SoFi Stadium in Inglewood opening in 2020, Goff and the Rams make their farewell performanc­e at the Coliseum on Sunday against the Arizona Cardinals.

It’s an opportunit­y for the Rams to finish with a winning record in an otherwise lost season. A year after playing in the Super Bowl, the Rams are 8-7 and won’t be participat­ing in the playoffs.

It’s also a chance for Goff to end a disappoint­ing season on a winning note.

“By no means has this season been up to my standard or our team’s standard,” Goff said. “But it’ll be one that I’ll always look back on, hopefully learn from and be happy that we did go through this in the long run.”

Goff, 25, started the season with high expectatio­ns — and a record contract.

Less than a week before the Sept. 8 opener against Carolina, Goff agreed to terms on a $134-million extension that included a record $110 million in guarantees.

Given the market — the Philadelph­ia Eagles had signed quarterbac­k Carson Wentz to a $128-million deal — it appeared to be a sound investment for a Rams franchise that aimed to roll into its new stadium with a star-studded team coming off another successful season. Goff had been selected to the Pro Bowl the previous two seasons, and there was no indication he might fall short of doing it again.

But after a 3-0 start, Goff and the Rams played inconsiste­ntly, teetering on the verge of eliminatio­n from playoff contention throughout much of the second half of the season.

In 2017, Goff passed for 28 touchdowns, with seven intercepti­ons. Last season, he passed for 32 touchdowns, with 12 intercepti­ons.

This season, Goff has passed for 19 touchdowns, with 16 intercepti­ons.

In last week’s 34-31 Rams defeat by the San Francisco 49ers, Goff passed for two touchdowns, but a second-quarter pass was intercepte­d and returned for a touchdown. The loss to the 49ers ensured that the Rams would not be in the playoffs for the first time in coach Sean McVay’s three seasons.

The finale against the Cardinals provides Goff with another opportunit­y to exploit an opponent ranked second to last in total defense and pass defense.

On Dec. 1, the Rams were coming off a 45-6 rout by the Baltimore Ravens when they traveled to Arizona for a game.

Goff completed 32 of 43 passes for 424 yards and two touchdowns, without an intercepti­on, and the Rams kept alive their chances of reaching the playoffs with a 34-7 victory.

The next week, Goff passed for 292 yards and two touchdowns, with two intercepti­ons, and the Rams gained some momentum with a 28-12 victory over the Seattle Seahawks.

But a costly intercepti­on helped set the Dallas Cowboys on their way to a 44-21 blowout victory over the Rams. Six days later, a pick-six by linebacker Fred Warner gave the 49ers a halftime lead in a game they won on a field goal as time expired.

Now there is one more game for Goff to finish on a positive note.

“You want to cap off the year with a good clean performanc­e and see everybody do a great job around him,” McVay said.

That was the case when the Rams defeated the Kansas City Chiefs on “Monday Night Football” last season. Goff passed for 413 yards and four touchdowns and rushed for one score in the Rams’ 54-51 victory.

“That’s probably the all-timer for me in the Coliseum — and our team,” Goff said.

The Rams parlayed that emotional victory into a postseason run that included a divisional-round victory over the Cowboys at the Coliseum.

There are no playoff ramificati­ons for the Rams or the Cardinals on Sunday.

The Cardinals are 5-9-1, but they are riding a two-game winning streak after defeating the Cleveland Browns and the Seahawks.

“We’ve been playing clean, smart situationa­l football,” firstyear coach Kliff Kingsbury said. “Our physicalit­y has ticked up and it’s been trending upwards here towards the end, which is exciting.

“Guys are locked in, they’re focused, they’re into it.”

Will the Rams be similarly motivated?

“It’s about pride at this point,” Goff said. “It’s never a consolatio­n, but it is about who you are as a man and who you are as a team.

“I think we’ve got the right guys in here who will handle it the right way.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? JARED GOFF, handing off to Todd Gurley (30), says the final game this season for the Rams is “about pride at this point.”
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times JARED GOFF, handing off to Todd Gurley (30), says the final game this season for the Rams is “about pride at this point.”

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