Miami Herald

Rams’ Stafford heads into Super Bowl repeat quest with ‘no limitation­s’

- From Miami Herald Wire Services will perform at halftime Thursday in Inglewood.

Matthew Stafford understand­s why the football world is still talking about his elbow.

After all, he followed up the Los Angeles Rams’ Super Bowl victory by not throwing passes in any offseason workouts, participat­ing sparingly in training camp and sitting out all three preseason games — all to avoid aggravatin­g the elbow condition that coach Sean McVay called “a little bit abnormal for a quarterbac­k.”

Stafford understand­s, but he’s also a bit tired of talking about it himself.

“I feel great,” Stafford said Sunday. “Ready to go play. Can always be better. Can always try to feel like I’m 21 again. I’ll keep trying. But no, I feel really good. Feel I can make every throw. I don’t know what else you need to hear from me.”

The veteran passer is eager to end the discussion­s Thursday night when he takes the field at SoFi Stadium for the

NFL’s regular-season opener against the Buffalo Bills. Stafford and McVay both say the quarterbac­k will have no limitation­s while leading the Rams’ high-octane passing offense against the NFL’s best team in pass defense last season.

The discussion around

Stafford’s elbow has done nothing to minimize the impressive­ness of his achievemen­ts last season, After 12 prolific seasons of frustratio­n with the Detroit Lions, he transforme­d his NFL story and moved to the brink of the 50,000-yard club — he'll become the 12th member in NFL history with his first 5 yards passing this season.

Stafford moved west and immediatel­y won a ring with poised, resilient play, particular­ly during the first four playoff victories of his career. He matched the highest completion percentage of his career while throwing for 4,886 yards and a career high-tying 41 touchdowns.

But Stafford also played through elbow pain last season when he was still learning the intricacie­s of McVay’s offense and building chemistry with his new receivers. A year later, that chemistry is establishe­d with most of his potential playmakers, and he knows the offense inside-out.

That gives him more leeway to rest his arm, and the Rams decided he should use it.

“I think we’ve got a really good plan in place, no different than last year,” McVay said. “These were things that he was kind of working through in his own way … but he’s throwing the ball excellent. Everything I’m seeing is reflective of everything he’s saying to me.”

McVay said the Rams are “always cognizant of a pitch clock,” but Stafford has no inherent limitation­s. If the quarterbac­k needed to throw 50 times, McVay said they wouldn’t hesitate to do it.

Stafford and the Rams have been purposely imprecise when talking about the specifics of his elbow soreness, but he had an offseason injection that helped. He is on a regimen of exercises and workouts to keep the joint in good shape.

“I’ve been doing some things that made it feel better,” Stafford said. “Probably going to continue to do those things if you need to, and if you don’t, then you just go out there and play ball.”

Stafford has a year of history with all of his potential receivers except

Allen Robinson, the Rams’ biggest offseason free agent signing on offense. They’ve worked together whenever possible since the start of training camp, and they expect to have much less trouble getting on the same page than two players without their years of experience. Robinson caught several long passes from Stafford on Sunday in the first periods of practice.

Ozzy Osbourne

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