The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Stafford is day-to-day with sprained ligament in right thumb

- By Adam Grosbard agrosbard@scng.com

Rams quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford is day-to-day with a sprained UCL in his right thumb, coach Sean Mcvay said on Monday.

Stafford is dealing with swelling and bruising in the thumb that limits his ability to grip a football, Mcvay said. He had previously suffered a UCL sprain in the same thumb which required surgery, so scar tissue is also a factor in Stafford’s recovery, though the Rams aren’t ruling him out for Sunday’s road game against the Green Bay Packers.

“It’s exclusivel­y a result of how quickly that thumb turns over,” Mcvay said. “It’s really about let’s see what happens over the next 2448 hours in regards to all of those things that I previously mentioned.”

Stafford originally hit his thumb twice during the Rams’ final drive of the first half in Sunday’s loss to the Dallas Cowboys, banging his hand into a helmet on the two-point conversion before halftime. But doctors determined the thumb was stable following that incident.

When he was on the receiving end of a two-point conversion on the opening drive of the third quarter, he bent the thumb back against the turf when diving across the goal line.

Mcvay said the Rams originally feared worse than a UCL sprain, but scans revealed Stafford had avoided a worst-case scenario. The Rams will consider the weather in Green Bay, expected to be in the high 30s and low 40s, and the fact that a Week 10 bye would give Stafford extra time to heal before taking the field again.

“So much of that is about the dialogue and the discussion in regards to how is he feeling, what does he feel like he is able to do,” Mcvay. “We would love to have him available for us, but not at the expense of pushing it and making sure that you’re not leaving him susceptibl­e to anything unnecessar­y.”

The expectatio­n is if Stafford can’t play against the Packers, Brett Rypien would be the starter. But Mcvay acknowledg­ed the Rams, who have lost five of their past seven games, are exploring the possibilit­y of signing a free agent to reinforce the position.

Mcvay said it would be beneficial if a quarterbac­k acquisitio­n had some experience in his offense, but it would not be the only factor considered.

“We definitely have to get some contingenc­y plans in order,” Mcvay said. “I think we’d be silly to not get our ducks in a row if (Stafford is) not able to go and figure out, all right, with Brett, what does that look like in addition to adding somebody to our quarterbac­k room?”

Mcvay said the Rams had considered adding a third quarterbac­k to the roster after rookie Stetson Bennett IV was added to the non-football injury list prior to the season opener, but other considerat­ions got in the way.

As for Bennett, who has not been around the team since going on the NFI, there is still no update on his situation but it appears unlikely he will return to the Rams this season.

“I’m not ready to say that he won’t be back with us at all this year, but it’s probably less likely than it is likely that he would be,” Mcvay said.

Which, for the moment, leaves the Rams with Rypien. Prior to Saturday, the fourth-year veteran had played in eight games in his career, completing 61.5% of his passes for 778 yards, four touchdowns and eight intercepti­ons in three seasons with the Denver Broncos.

Against the Cowboys, Rypien completed 50% of his 10 passing attempts for 42 yards. He said after the game that he felt like he was moving a little too fast in his footwork and progressio­ns as the adrenaline kicked in.

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