San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SURPRISING RAMS CAN’T AFFORD GIANT LETDOWN

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.

A year after having one of the most disappoint­ing seasons in NFL history, the Los Angeles Rams are on the verge of returning to the playoffs.

The key is the 2021 Super Bowl champions need to take a big step now or else things will get dicey.

The Rams (8-7) can clinch a playoff berth today by beating the Giants (5-10) at Metlife Stadium, plus getting a little help with either a loss by Seattle (8-7) at home against Pittsburgh (8-7) or a tie between Green Bay and Minnesota (8-7).

It has been an unexpected run. Los Angeles was 3-6 going into its bye week. It is 5-1 since, with the only setback being an overtime loss to the Nfl-leading Ravens (12-3) in Baltimore.

It’s certainly not the same team that went 5-12 last season in becoming the 17th Super Bowl champion to miss the playoffs in the ensuing season.

“I love the way that these guys have come in and I like the consistenc­y that I’ve seen throughout the course of the year,” coach Sean Mcvay said. “But I think we have really started to play better football, more quality football, more complement­ary.”

If the Rams slip, the playoffs might be in jeopardy. They close the regular season at San Francisco against the NFC West champion 49ers (11-4).

The Giants, who made the playoffs last season in Brian Daboll’s first year as coach, were eliminated from contention Monday in a 3325

loss to the Eagles in Philadelph­ia.

Daboll Rams quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford has been outstandin­g since the bye week.

“He’s one of the top quarterbac­ks in the league, been that way for a long time,” Daboll said. “Playing good team football.”

Stafford has been humming since the bye, with the 15th-year quarterbac­k racking up 1,578 yards with 15 TDS and just two intercepti­ons — none in the past four games.

Wide receiver Puka Nacua is within striking distance of the NFL rookie records for receptions and yards receiving in a season, while Cooper Kupp has rebounded from a quiet stretch with 22 catches for 278 yards and two TDS in the past three games. Even veteran newcomer Demarcus Robinson has broken through with a TD catch in four straight games.

The Rams have not been multidimen­sional, however, and that could be noteworthy today against the Giants, who are 29th in the NFL against the run. Kyren Williams of Los Angeles is a problem for even the best run defenses.

The elusive, speedy second-year pro leads the NFL with 96.1 yards rushing per game, and he has five 100yard performanc­es in his last seven games. He already has the Rams’ first 1,000yard rushing season since Todd Gurley in 2018, and he’s only the second 1,000-yard rushing teammate of Stafford’s entire career.

The Giants have been poor offensivel­y, with only New England (212) scoring fewer points this season than New York’s 214. Daboll has opted to have veteran Tyrod Taylor start at quarterbac­k today, replacing Tommy Devito.

Taylor took over in the second half against Philadelph­ia and threw a 69-yard TD pass to Darius Slayton, a play that was 14 yards longer than Devito’s total in the first half.

This will be Taylor’s fourth start this season. He started three games after Daniel Jones was sidelined in October with a neck injury. However, he broke four ribs against the Jets. Jones returned and started in Las Vegas until tearing an ACL. Devito started the next six games.

On the other side of the ball, the Giants have two of the three defensive players in the NFL to hhave played every down for their team this season — inside linebacker Bobby Okereke and safety Xavier Mckinney, who both had 10 tackles Monday. Kamren Curl of Washington is the other.

Okereke leads the Giants with 132 tackles and he’s the only player with 130-plus tackles, nine tackles for loss and nine passes defensed this season. Mckinney ranks sixth among defensive backs with a career-high 104 tackles. He had two intercepti­ons in the last meeting.

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