QBs Murray, Stafford in search of first career playoff victory
INGLEWOOD, Calif. — If Kyler Murray wants to understand just how important it is to seize the opportunity whenever a team reaches the NFL playoffs, the Arizona Cardinals star only needs to look at his counterpart across the field at SoFi Stadium on Monday night.
Just like Murray, Matthew Stafford is a former No. 1 overall pick who has never won a playoff game despite being among the NFL’s top quarterbacks.
And Stafford has been trying to end that drought since Murray was in the seventh grade.
Two elite passers will try to get their first postseason victories when the fourthseeded Los Angeles Rams (12-5) host fifth-seeded Arizona (11-6) in the first playoff game in the history of the multibillion-dollar stadium that will host the Super Bowl less than four weeks later.
The Cardinals didn’t make the playoffs in Murray’s first two seasons, but Stafford’s Detroit Lions reached the postseason only three times in his 12 prolific seasons there, losing each time in the wildcard round.
While Stafford reveals little about his personal motivation to break through in the playoffs, everyone knows the Rams acquired him in a trade for Jared Goff — who led LA to the Super Bowl — because they felt Stafford could take them further.
“Every time I step on a field, I’m proving myself,” Stafford said. “This is a team game, no question, but at the same time, do I know that when the quarterback plays a good game, you’ve got a better chance to win? Absolutely.”
The game is the third meeting of the season between divisional rivals that split their first two matchups, each winning on the other’s home field. Both teams stumbled into the postseason after dismaying home losses: The Rams were solidly beaten by San Francisco, but still won the NFC West because the Cardinals lost to last-place Seattle.
And both teams would consider a first-round exit to be a major disappointment: Los Angeles built its self-described All-Star team with the high-priced midseason acquisitions of Von Miller and Odell Beckham Jr. specifically to attack this Super Bowl window; the Cardinals’ similarly starstudded roster started 7-0 and 10- 2 before stalling down the stretch of an impressive breakthrough season.
Sean McVay had beaten the Cardinals eight consecutive times before Kliff Kingsbury’s group broke through to win in Inglewood in October. The Rams then won in Glendale, Ariz., in December, but this rivalry is no longer onesided.
“They really had our number as an organization,” Kingsbury said. “But the last couple of games have been a dogfight, back and forth. Lots of guys having impressive performances and keeping it close. That’s my expectation for Monday night. A lot of talented players out there on the field.”