Los Angeles Times

Signs point to Rams opening versus Bills

- SAM FARMER ON THE NFL

If the Rams are playing Denver on Christmas Day — as CBS announced Tuesday morning — that almost certainly means that the defending Super Bowl champions will be squaring off against Buffalo in the Kickoff Game on Sept. 8 at SoFi Stadium.

By every indication, the NFL had zeroed in on either the Bills or Broncos playing at the Rams in the traditiona­l Thursday night game that opens the season.

The league has not confirmed the Kickoff Game matchup, with the full schedule release coming Thursday night.

Buffalo was eliminated from the playoffs last season in an AFC divisional-round overtime thriller at Kansas City.

So impactful was that

Bills-Chiefs game, a 42-36 shootout in which Buffalo was denied a possession in the extra period, that the NFL changed its overtime rules for the postseason.

Beginning this season, even if the team that gets the ball first in overtime scores a touchdown on that possession, the opponent will get a chance to answer.

Whenever it takes place, Bills-Rams will feature quarterbac­ks Matthew Stafford and Buffalo’s Josh

Allen, two of the league’s premier passers, and the added wrinkle of new Bills pass rusher Von Miller. He was a key component of the Rams’ Super Bowl run.

Buffalo had the NFL’s No. 1-ranked defense last season, giving up 272.8 yards per game — 33.1 yards ahead of second-ranked Carolina.

This will mark the first Kickoff Game played in California and only the second on the West Coast, as Seattle played host to the Thursday night tradition in 2014.

It was in 2002 that the NFL began kicking off the season with a single primetime game. Two years later, at New England, the league began the tradition of the defending Super Bowl champion hosting the opener.

The league made an exception in 2019 to celebrate its 100th season, opening with the NFL’s oldest rivalry with the Chicago Bears playing host to the Green Bay Packers.

Buffalo, which has never won a Super Bowl, also has never been the visiting team in the Kickoff Game.

Throughout the scheduling process, the NFL gave strong considerat­ion to pitting the Rams and Denver for the opener, especially in light of the interest in new Broncos quarterbac­k Russell Wilson. Dallas and San Francisco also were candidates to open against the Rams.

In Week 1, the Bills likely will be without star cornerback Tre’Davious White, as he isn’t likely to be sufficient­ly recovered from a serious knee injury suffered in late November. The team used a firstround pick April 28 on Florida cornerback Kaiir Elam.

Since returning to Los Angeles in 2016, the Rams have played and lost to Buffalo twice — a 30-19 loss at the Coliseum in 2016 and a 35-32 defeat at Buffalo in 2020. But those games were with Case Keenum and Jared Goff at quarterbac­k for the Rams, not Stafford.

In the most recent meeting, Allen threw for four touchdowns with an intercepti­on. The Rams clawed back from a 25-point deficit in the second half of that game, but Allen bailed out his team with a three-yard touchdown pass with 15 seconds left.

Buffalo led 28-3 midway through the third quarter.

The Rams came close to matching what would have been the third-biggest comeback in the history of the NFL’s regular season.

“We were just one step away, and unfortunat­ely in this league that’s not good enough,” then-Rams safety John Johnson said at the time.

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